PHARMACOGNOSY & Phytochemistry-I
(BP405T)
Unit-II
Part-2
FACTORS AFFECTING CULTIVATION.
Name: Mrs. Pooja Deepak Bhandare
Assistant Professor
G H RAISONI UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
FACTORS AFFECTINGCULTIVATION
• Cultivation of medicinal plants offers wide range of advantages over the plants obtained from wild sources.
There are few factors to concern which have a real effect on plant growth and development, nature and quantity
of secondary metabolites.
• The factors affecting cultivation are altitude, temperature, rainfall, length of day, day light, soil and soil fertility,
fertilizers and pests.
• The effects of these factors have been studied by growing particular plants in different environmental conditions
and observing variations.
• For example, a plant which is subjected to a particular environment may develop as a small plant which, when
analysed shows high proportion of metabolite than the plants attained the required growth.
• Nutrients have the ability to enhance the production of secondary metabolites, at the same time they may reduce
the metabolites as well.
1. Altitude
• Altitude is a very important factor in cultivation of medicinal plants. Tea,
cinchona and eucalyptus are cultivated favourably at an altitude of 1,000–
2,000 metres.
• Cinnamon and cardamom are grown at a height of 500–1000 metres, while
senna can be cultivated at sea level. The following are the examples of
medicinal and aromatic plants indicating the altitude for their successful
cultivation (Table below).
2.Temperature
• Temperature is a crucial factor controlling the growth, metabolism and there
by the yield of secondary metabolites of plants. Even though each species
has become adapted to its own natural environment, they are able to exist in
a considerable range of temperature.
• Many plants will grow better in temperate regions during summer, but they
lack in resistance to withstand frost in winter.
Table: Optimum Temperature for Drug Cultivation
3. Rainfall
• For the proper development of plant, rainfall is required in proper measurements.
Xerophytic plants like aloes do not require irrigation or rainfall. The effects of
rainfall on plants must be considered in relation to the annual rainfall throughout
the year with the water holding properties of the soil. Variable results have been
reported for the production of constituents under different conditions of rainfall.
• Excessive rainfall could cause a reduction in the secondary metabolites due to
leaching of water soluble substances from the plants.
4. Day Length and Day Light
• It has been proved that even the length of the day has an effect over the metabolites
production. The plants that are kept in long day conditions may contain more or less amount of
constituents when compared to the plants kept in short day. For example peppermint has
produced menthone, menthol and traces of menthofuran in long day conditions and only
menthofuran in short day condition.
• The developments of plants vary much in both the amount and intensity of the light they
require. The wild grown plants would meet the required conditions and so they grow but
during cultivation we have to fulfill the requirements of plants. The day light was found to
increase the amount of alkaloids in belladonna, stramonium, cinchona, etc. Even the type of
radiation too has an effect over the development and metabolites of plants.
5. Soil
• Each and every plant species have its own soil and nutritive requirements. The three important basic
characteristics of soils are their physical, chemical and microbiological properties.
• Soil provides mechanical support, water and essential foods for the development of plants. Soil
consists of air, water, mineral matters and organic matters.
• Variations in particle size result in different soils ranging from clay, sand and gravel. Particle size
influences the water holding capacity of soil. The type and amount of minerals plays a vital role in
plant cultivation.
• Calcium favours the growth of certain plants whereas with some plants it does not produce any effects.
• The plants are able to determine their own soil pH range for their growth; microbes should be taken in
to consideration which grows well in certain pH. Nitrogen containing soil has a great momentum in
raising the production of alkaloids in some plants.
• Depending upon the size of the mineral matter, the following names are
given to the soil (Table 6.3).
• Table : Type of soil on the basis of particle size.
• Depending upon the percentage covered by clay, soils are classified as under
• Table : Type of soil on the basis of percentage covered by clay.
6. Soil Fertility
• It is the capacity of soil to provide nutrients in adequate amounts and in
balanced proportion to plants. If cropping is done without fortification of
soil with plant nutrients, soil fertility gets lost. It is also diminished through
leaching and erosion. Soil fertility can be maintained by addition of animal
manures, nitrogen-fixing bacteria or by application of chemical fertilizers.
The latter is time saving and surest of all above techniques.
7. Fertilizers and Manures
• Plant also needs food for their growth and development. What plants need basically for their
growth are the carbon dioxide, sun-rays, water and mineral matter from the soil. Thus, it is seen
that with limited number of chemical elements, plants build up fruits, grains, fibres, etc. and
synthesize fixed and volatile oils, glycosides, alkaloids, sugar and many more chemicals.
• a) Chemical fertilizers: Animals are in need of vitamins, plants are in need of sixteen nutrient
elements for synthesizing various com-pounds. Some of them are known as primary nutrients
like nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. Magnesium, calcium and sulphur are required in small
quantities and hence, they are known as secondary nutrients. Trace elements like copper,
manganese, iron, boron, molybdenum, zinc are also necessary for plant growths are known as
micronutrients. Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and chlorine are provided from water and air. Every
element has to perform some specific function in growth and development of plants. Its
deficiency is also characterized by certain symptoms.
(b) Manures : Farm yard manure (FYM/compost), castor seed cake, poultry manures,
neem and karanj seed cakes vermin compost, etc. are manures. Oil-cake and compost
normally consists of 3–6% of nitrogen, 2% phosphates and 1–1.5% potash. They are
made easily available to plants. Bone meal, fish meal, biogas slurry, blood meal and
press mud are the other forms of organic fertilizers.
(c) Biofertilizers: Inadequate supply, high costs and undesirable effects if used
successively are the demerits of fertilizers or manures and hence the cultivator has to
opt for some other type of fertilizer. Biofertilizers are the most suitable forms that can
be tried. These consist of different types of micro organisms or lower organisms which
fix the atmospheric nitrogen in soil and plant can use them for their day to day use.
Thus they are symbiotic. Rhizobium, Azotobactor, Azosperillium, Bijericcia, Blue-
green algae, Azolla, etc. are the examples of biofertilizers.
8. Pests and Pests Control
• Pests are undesired plant or animal species that causes a great damage to the plants. There
are different types of pests; they are microbes, insects, non insect pests and weeds.
a. Microbes: They include fungi, bacteria and viruses. Armillaria Root Rot (Oak Root
Fungus) is a disease caused by fungi Armil-laria mellea (Marasmiaceae) and in this the
infected plant become nonproductive and very frequently dies within two to four years.
Plants develop weak, shorter shoots as they are infected by the pathogen. Dark, root-like
structures (rhizomorphs), grow into the soil after symptoms develop on plants.
• The fungus is favoured by soil that is continually damp. Powdery mildew is another disease
caused by fungus Uncinula necato on leaves, where chlorotic spots appear on the upper
surface of leaf.
• On fruit the pathogen appears as white, powdery masses that may colonize the entire
berry surface. Summer Bunch Rot is a disease in which masses of black, brown, or
green spores develop on the surface of infected berries caused by a variety microbes
like Aspergillus niger, Alternaria tennis, Botrytis cinerea, Cladosporium herbarum,
Rhizopus arrhizus, Penicillium sp., and others.
• Fomitopsis pinicola (Sw.) P. Karst. Belonging to family Fomitopsidaceae causes a
diseases known as red-belted fungus. Several other fungi attacks the medicinal plants,
like Pythium pinosurn causes pythium rhizome rot, Septoria digitalis causing leaf
spot, little leaf disease by Phywphthora cinnamomi Rands (Pythiaceae), etc.
• Crown gall disease caused by Agrobacterium tumefaciens (Rblzobiaceae). Galls may
be produced on canes, trunks, roots, and cordons and may grow to several inches in
diameter. Internally galls are soft and have the appearance of disorganized tissue.
• The pathogen can be transmitted by any agent that contacts the contaminated material.
Galls commonly develop where plants have been injured during cultivation or pruning.
Xylella fastidiosa is a bacterium causes Pierce’s Disease, in this leaves become slightly
yellow or red along margins and eventually leaf margins dry or die.
• Many viruses are also reported to cause necrosis of leaves, petioles and stems, they are
tobacco mosaic virus, mosaic virus, cucumber mosaic virus, tobacco ring spot virus,
yellow vein mosaic, etc.
• Controlling techniques:
• Chemical fumigation of the soil, fungicide, bactericide, pruning, proper water and fertilizer
management, good sanitation, heat treatment of planting stock, cut and remove the infected
parts, geneti-cally manipulating the plants for producing plants to resist fungi and bacteria
are practices that are used to prevent or minimize the effects produced by microbes.
b) Insects
• Ants, they are of different varieties, Argentine ant: Linepi- thema humile, Gray ants:
Formica aerata and Formica perpilosa, Pavement ant: Tetramorium caespitum.,
Southern fire ant: Solenopsis xyloni, Thief ant: Solenopsis molesta, they spoil the
soil by making nest and they feed honey dew secreted in plants.
• Branch and Twig Borer (Melalgus confertus) burrow into the canes through the base
of the bud or into the crotch formed by the shoot and spur. Feeding is often deep
enough to completely conceal the adult in the hole.
• When shoots reach a length of 10–12 inches, a strong wind can cause the infected
parts to twist and break.
• The click beetle (Limo-nius canus) can feed on buds. Cutworms (Peridroma saucia)
(Amathes c-nigrum) (Orthndes rufula) injures the buds and so the buds may not develop.
• Leafhoppers (Erythroneura elegantuhi) (Erythroneum variabilis) remove the contents of
leaf cells, leaving behind empty cells that appear as pale yellow spots.
• Oak twig pruners (Anelaphiis spp. Linsley) are known as shoot, twig and root insects that
affects the above men-tioned parts.
• Controlling techniques: Tilling the soil will also affects the nesting sites of ants and help
to reduce their popula-tions, collection and destruction of eggs, larvae, pupae and adults of
insects, trapping the insects, insecticides, creat-ing a situation to compete among males for
mating with females, cutworms can be prevented by natural enemies like, predaceous or
parasitic insects, mammals, parasitic nematodes, pathogens, birds, and reptiles,
C) Non insect pests
They are divided in to vertebrates and invertebrates. Ver-tebrates that disrupt the
plants are monkeys, rats, birds, squirrels, etc. Non vertebrates are, Webspinning
Spider Mites (Tetranychuspacificus) (Eotetranychus willamettei) (Tetrany-chus
urticae) causes discoloration in leaves and yellow spots. Nematodes (Meloidogyne
incognita) (Xiphinema americanutri) (Criconemella xenoplax) produces giant cell
formation, dis-turbs the uptake of nutrients and water, and interferes with plant
growth, crabs, snails are the other few invertebrates that causes trouble to the plant.
• Controlling techniques: Construction of concrete ware houses, traps, biological
methods, rodenticides, etc.
d) Weeds
• Weeds reduce growth and yields of plants by competing for water, nutrients, and sunlight. Weed control
enhances the establishment of new plants and improves the growth and yield of established plants. The skilled
persons have many weed management tools available to achieve these objectives; however, the methods of
using these tools vary from year to year and from place to place.
• Soil characteristics are important to weed management. Soil texture and organic matter influence the weed
species that are present, the number and timing of cultivations required, and the activity of herbicides. Annual
species, such as puncturevine, crabgrass, horseweed, and Panicum spp., or perennials like johnsongrass,
nutsedge, and bermudagrass are more prevalent on light-textured soil while perenni-als such as curly dock,
field bindweed, and dallisgrass are more common on heavier-textured soils. Less preemergent herbicide is
required for weed control on sandy, light soils, but residual control may be shorter than on clay or clay loam
soils. Use low rates of herbicide on sandy soils or those low in organic matter. Clay soils are slower to dry for
effective cultivation than sandy loam soils; thus, more frequent cultivation is practiced on lighter soils than
heavy soils.
• Few common weeds are, Bermudagrass, It is a vigorous spring- and summer-
growing perennial. It grows from seed but its extensive system of rhizomes and
stolons can also be spread during cultivation, Dallisgrass, It is a common perennial
weed that can be highly competi-tive in newly planted plants; in established plants
area it competes for soil moisture and nutrients. Dallisgrass seedlings germinate in
spring and summer, and form new plants on short rhizomes that developed from
the original root system. The other weeds are pigweeds Amaranthus spp.
pineapple-weed Chamomilla suaveolens, nightshades Solanum spp., etc.
• Apart from these, Parasitic and Epiphytic Plants like dodder (Cuscuta spp. L.),
mistletoe (Phoradendron spp. Nutt.), American squawroot (Conopholis americana),
etc., too affects the growth of plants,
• Controlling techniques: Use of low rates of herbicides: Herbicides are traditionally discussed as
two groups: those that are active against germinating weed seeds (preemergent herbicides) and those
that are active on growing plants (postemergent herbicides). Some herbicides have both pre-and
postemergent activity. Herbicides vary in their ability to control different weed species.
• Preemergent herbicides are active in the soil against ger-minating weed seedlings. These herbicides
are applied to bare soil and are leached into the soil with rain or irrigation where they affect
germinating weed seeds. If herbicides remain on the soil surface without incorporation, some will
degrade rapidly from sunlight. Weeds that emerge while the herbicide is on the surface, before it is
activated by rain or irrigation, will not be controlled. Postemergent herbicides are applied to control
weeds already growing in the vineyard. They can be combined with preemergent herbicides or
applied as spot treatments during the growing season. In newly planted plants, selective
postemergent herbicides are available for the control of most annual and perennial grasses, but not
broadleaf weeds.
• Frequent wetting of the soil promotes more rapid herbicide degradation in the
soil. Herbicide degradation is generally faster in moist, warm soils than in dry,
cold soils.
• General Methods of Pest Controls
9. Other Factors that Affect the CultivatedPlants
a. Air Pollution
• Chemical discharges into the atmosphere have increased dramatically during this century,
but the total effect on plants is virtually unknown. It has been demonstrated that air
pollutants can cause mortality and losses in growth of plants. Nearly all species of
deciduous and coniferous trees are sensitive to some pollutants. There are many chemicals
released into the atmosphere singly and as compounds. In addition, other compounds are
synthesized in the atmosphere. Some chemicals can be identified through leaf tissue
analysis and by analysing the air. Generally, pollution injury first appears as leaf injury.
Spots between the veins, leaf margin discoloration, and tip burns are common. These
symptoms can also be influenced by host sensitivity, which is effected by genetic
characteristics and environmental factors.
b. Herbicide
• Herbicides should be handled very carefully; misapplication of herbicides
can often damage nontarget plants. The total extent of such damage
remains unclear, but localized, severe damage occurs. Symptoms of
herbicide injury are variable due to chemical mode of action, dosage,
duration of expo-sure, plant species, and environmental conditions. Some
herbicides cause growth abnormalities such as cupping or twisting of
foliage while others cause foliage yellowing or browning, defoliation, or
death.
FACTORS AFFECTING CULTIVATION. PHARMACOGNOSY & Phytochemistry-I (BP405T)Unit-IIPart-2

FACTORS AFFECTING CULTIVATION. PHARMACOGNOSY & Phytochemistry-I (BP405T) Unit-II Part-2

  • 1.
    PHARMACOGNOSY & Phytochemistry-I (BP405T) Unit-II Part-2 FACTORSAFFECTING CULTIVATION. Name: Mrs. Pooja Deepak Bhandare Assistant Professor G H RAISONI UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
  • 2.
    FACTORS AFFECTINGCULTIVATION • Cultivationof medicinal plants offers wide range of advantages over the plants obtained from wild sources. There are few factors to concern which have a real effect on plant growth and development, nature and quantity of secondary metabolites. • The factors affecting cultivation are altitude, temperature, rainfall, length of day, day light, soil and soil fertility, fertilizers and pests. • The effects of these factors have been studied by growing particular plants in different environmental conditions and observing variations. • For example, a plant which is subjected to a particular environment may develop as a small plant which, when analysed shows high proportion of metabolite than the plants attained the required growth. • Nutrients have the ability to enhance the production of secondary metabolites, at the same time they may reduce the metabolites as well.
  • 3.
    1. Altitude • Altitudeis a very important factor in cultivation of medicinal plants. Tea, cinchona and eucalyptus are cultivated favourably at an altitude of 1,000– 2,000 metres. • Cinnamon and cardamom are grown at a height of 500–1000 metres, while senna can be cultivated at sea level. The following are the examples of medicinal and aromatic plants indicating the altitude for their successful cultivation (Table below).
  • 5.
    2.Temperature • Temperature isa crucial factor controlling the growth, metabolism and there by the yield of secondary metabolites of plants. Even though each species has become adapted to its own natural environment, they are able to exist in a considerable range of temperature. • Many plants will grow better in temperate regions during summer, but they lack in resistance to withstand frost in winter.
  • 6.
    Table: Optimum Temperaturefor Drug Cultivation
  • 7.
    3. Rainfall • Forthe proper development of plant, rainfall is required in proper measurements. Xerophytic plants like aloes do not require irrigation or rainfall. The effects of rainfall on plants must be considered in relation to the annual rainfall throughout the year with the water holding properties of the soil. Variable results have been reported for the production of constituents under different conditions of rainfall. • Excessive rainfall could cause a reduction in the secondary metabolites due to leaching of water soluble substances from the plants.
  • 8.
    4. Day Lengthand Day Light • It has been proved that even the length of the day has an effect over the metabolites production. The plants that are kept in long day conditions may contain more or less amount of constituents when compared to the plants kept in short day. For example peppermint has produced menthone, menthol and traces of menthofuran in long day conditions and only menthofuran in short day condition. • The developments of plants vary much in both the amount and intensity of the light they require. The wild grown plants would meet the required conditions and so they grow but during cultivation we have to fulfill the requirements of plants. The day light was found to increase the amount of alkaloids in belladonna, stramonium, cinchona, etc. Even the type of radiation too has an effect over the development and metabolites of plants.
  • 9.
    5. Soil • Eachand every plant species have its own soil and nutritive requirements. The three important basic characteristics of soils are their physical, chemical and microbiological properties. • Soil provides mechanical support, water and essential foods for the development of plants. Soil consists of air, water, mineral matters and organic matters. • Variations in particle size result in different soils ranging from clay, sand and gravel. Particle size influences the water holding capacity of soil. The type and amount of minerals plays a vital role in plant cultivation. • Calcium favours the growth of certain plants whereas with some plants it does not produce any effects. • The plants are able to determine their own soil pH range for their growth; microbes should be taken in to consideration which grows well in certain pH. Nitrogen containing soil has a great momentum in raising the production of alkaloids in some plants.
  • 10.
    • Depending uponthe size of the mineral matter, the following names are given to the soil (Table 6.3). • Table : Type of soil on the basis of particle size.
  • 11.
    • Depending uponthe percentage covered by clay, soils are classified as under • Table : Type of soil on the basis of percentage covered by clay.
  • 12.
    6. Soil Fertility •It is the capacity of soil to provide nutrients in adequate amounts and in balanced proportion to plants. If cropping is done without fortification of soil with plant nutrients, soil fertility gets lost. It is also diminished through leaching and erosion. Soil fertility can be maintained by addition of animal manures, nitrogen-fixing bacteria or by application of chemical fertilizers. The latter is time saving and surest of all above techniques.
  • 13.
    7. Fertilizers andManures • Plant also needs food for their growth and development. What plants need basically for their growth are the carbon dioxide, sun-rays, water and mineral matter from the soil. Thus, it is seen that with limited number of chemical elements, plants build up fruits, grains, fibres, etc. and synthesize fixed and volatile oils, glycosides, alkaloids, sugar and many more chemicals. • a) Chemical fertilizers: Animals are in need of vitamins, plants are in need of sixteen nutrient elements for synthesizing various com-pounds. Some of them are known as primary nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. Magnesium, calcium and sulphur are required in small quantities and hence, they are known as secondary nutrients. Trace elements like copper, manganese, iron, boron, molybdenum, zinc are also necessary for plant growths are known as micronutrients. Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and chlorine are provided from water and air. Every element has to perform some specific function in growth and development of plants. Its deficiency is also characterized by certain symptoms.
  • 14.
    (b) Manures :Farm yard manure (FYM/compost), castor seed cake, poultry manures, neem and karanj seed cakes vermin compost, etc. are manures. Oil-cake and compost normally consists of 3–6% of nitrogen, 2% phosphates and 1–1.5% potash. They are made easily available to plants. Bone meal, fish meal, biogas slurry, blood meal and press mud are the other forms of organic fertilizers. (c) Biofertilizers: Inadequate supply, high costs and undesirable effects if used successively are the demerits of fertilizers or manures and hence the cultivator has to opt for some other type of fertilizer. Biofertilizers are the most suitable forms that can be tried. These consist of different types of micro organisms or lower organisms which fix the atmospheric nitrogen in soil and plant can use them for their day to day use. Thus they are symbiotic. Rhizobium, Azotobactor, Azosperillium, Bijericcia, Blue- green algae, Azolla, etc. are the examples of biofertilizers.
  • 15.
    8. Pests andPests Control • Pests are undesired plant or animal species that causes a great damage to the plants. There are different types of pests; they are microbes, insects, non insect pests and weeds. a. Microbes: They include fungi, bacteria and viruses. Armillaria Root Rot (Oak Root Fungus) is a disease caused by fungi Armil-laria mellea (Marasmiaceae) and in this the infected plant become nonproductive and very frequently dies within two to four years. Plants develop weak, shorter shoots as they are infected by the pathogen. Dark, root-like structures (rhizomorphs), grow into the soil after symptoms develop on plants. • The fungus is favoured by soil that is continually damp. Powdery mildew is another disease caused by fungus Uncinula necato on leaves, where chlorotic spots appear on the upper surface of leaf.
  • 16.
    • On fruitthe pathogen appears as white, powdery masses that may colonize the entire berry surface. Summer Bunch Rot is a disease in which masses of black, brown, or green spores develop on the surface of infected berries caused by a variety microbes like Aspergillus niger, Alternaria tennis, Botrytis cinerea, Cladosporium herbarum, Rhizopus arrhizus, Penicillium sp., and others. • Fomitopsis pinicola (Sw.) P. Karst. Belonging to family Fomitopsidaceae causes a diseases known as red-belted fungus. Several other fungi attacks the medicinal plants, like Pythium pinosurn causes pythium rhizome rot, Septoria digitalis causing leaf spot, little leaf disease by Phywphthora cinnamomi Rands (Pythiaceae), etc. • Crown gall disease caused by Agrobacterium tumefaciens (Rblzobiaceae). Galls may be produced on canes, trunks, roots, and cordons and may grow to several inches in diameter. Internally galls are soft and have the appearance of disorganized tissue.
  • 17.
    • The pathogencan be transmitted by any agent that contacts the contaminated material. Galls commonly develop where plants have been injured during cultivation or pruning. Xylella fastidiosa is a bacterium causes Pierce’s Disease, in this leaves become slightly yellow or red along margins and eventually leaf margins dry or die. • Many viruses are also reported to cause necrosis of leaves, petioles and stems, they are tobacco mosaic virus, mosaic virus, cucumber mosaic virus, tobacco ring spot virus, yellow vein mosaic, etc. • Controlling techniques: • Chemical fumigation of the soil, fungicide, bactericide, pruning, proper water and fertilizer management, good sanitation, heat treatment of planting stock, cut and remove the infected parts, geneti-cally manipulating the plants for producing plants to resist fungi and bacteria are practices that are used to prevent or minimize the effects produced by microbes.
  • 18.
    b) Insects • Ants,they are of different varieties, Argentine ant: Linepi- thema humile, Gray ants: Formica aerata and Formica perpilosa, Pavement ant: Tetramorium caespitum., Southern fire ant: Solenopsis xyloni, Thief ant: Solenopsis molesta, they spoil the soil by making nest and they feed honey dew secreted in plants. • Branch and Twig Borer (Melalgus confertus) burrow into the canes through the base of the bud or into the crotch formed by the shoot and spur. Feeding is often deep enough to completely conceal the adult in the hole. • When shoots reach a length of 10–12 inches, a strong wind can cause the infected parts to twist and break.
  • 19.
    • The clickbeetle (Limo-nius canus) can feed on buds. Cutworms (Peridroma saucia) (Amathes c-nigrum) (Orthndes rufula) injures the buds and so the buds may not develop. • Leafhoppers (Erythroneura elegantuhi) (Erythroneum variabilis) remove the contents of leaf cells, leaving behind empty cells that appear as pale yellow spots. • Oak twig pruners (Anelaphiis spp. Linsley) are known as shoot, twig and root insects that affects the above men-tioned parts. • Controlling techniques: Tilling the soil will also affects the nesting sites of ants and help to reduce their popula-tions, collection and destruction of eggs, larvae, pupae and adults of insects, trapping the insects, insecticides, creat-ing a situation to compete among males for mating with females, cutworms can be prevented by natural enemies like, predaceous or parasitic insects, mammals, parasitic nematodes, pathogens, birds, and reptiles,
  • 20.
    C) Non insectpests They are divided in to vertebrates and invertebrates. Ver-tebrates that disrupt the plants are monkeys, rats, birds, squirrels, etc. Non vertebrates are, Webspinning Spider Mites (Tetranychuspacificus) (Eotetranychus willamettei) (Tetrany-chus urticae) causes discoloration in leaves and yellow spots. Nematodes (Meloidogyne incognita) (Xiphinema americanutri) (Criconemella xenoplax) produces giant cell formation, dis-turbs the uptake of nutrients and water, and interferes with plant growth, crabs, snails are the other few invertebrates that causes trouble to the plant. • Controlling techniques: Construction of concrete ware houses, traps, biological methods, rodenticides, etc.
  • 21.
    d) Weeds • Weedsreduce growth and yields of plants by competing for water, nutrients, and sunlight. Weed control enhances the establishment of new plants and improves the growth and yield of established plants. The skilled persons have many weed management tools available to achieve these objectives; however, the methods of using these tools vary from year to year and from place to place. • Soil characteristics are important to weed management. Soil texture and organic matter influence the weed species that are present, the number and timing of cultivations required, and the activity of herbicides. Annual species, such as puncturevine, crabgrass, horseweed, and Panicum spp., or perennials like johnsongrass, nutsedge, and bermudagrass are more prevalent on light-textured soil while perenni-als such as curly dock, field bindweed, and dallisgrass are more common on heavier-textured soils. Less preemergent herbicide is required for weed control on sandy, light soils, but residual control may be shorter than on clay or clay loam soils. Use low rates of herbicide on sandy soils or those low in organic matter. Clay soils are slower to dry for effective cultivation than sandy loam soils; thus, more frequent cultivation is practiced on lighter soils than heavy soils.
  • 22.
    • Few commonweeds are, Bermudagrass, It is a vigorous spring- and summer- growing perennial. It grows from seed but its extensive system of rhizomes and stolons can also be spread during cultivation, Dallisgrass, It is a common perennial weed that can be highly competi-tive in newly planted plants; in established plants area it competes for soil moisture and nutrients. Dallisgrass seedlings germinate in spring and summer, and form new plants on short rhizomes that developed from the original root system. The other weeds are pigweeds Amaranthus spp. pineapple-weed Chamomilla suaveolens, nightshades Solanum spp., etc. • Apart from these, Parasitic and Epiphytic Plants like dodder (Cuscuta spp. L.), mistletoe (Phoradendron spp. Nutt.), American squawroot (Conopholis americana), etc., too affects the growth of plants,
  • 23.
    • Controlling techniques:Use of low rates of herbicides: Herbicides are traditionally discussed as two groups: those that are active against germinating weed seeds (preemergent herbicides) and those that are active on growing plants (postemergent herbicides). Some herbicides have both pre-and postemergent activity. Herbicides vary in their ability to control different weed species. • Preemergent herbicides are active in the soil against ger-minating weed seedlings. These herbicides are applied to bare soil and are leached into the soil with rain or irrigation where they affect germinating weed seeds. If herbicides remain on the soil surface without incorporation, some will degrade rapidly from sunlight. Weeds that emerge while the herbicide is on the surface, before it is activated by rain or irrigation, will not be controlled. Postemergent herbicides are applied to control weeds already growing in the vineyard. They can be combined with preemergent herbicides or applied as spot treatments during the growing season. In newly planted plants, selective postemergent herbicides are available for the control of most annual and perennial grasses, but not broadleaf weeds.
  • 24.
    • Frequent wettingof the soil promotes more rapid herbicide degradation in the soil. Herbicide degradation is generally faster in moist, warm soils than in dry, cold soils. • General Methods of Pest Controls
  • 25.
    9. Other Factorsthat Affect the CultivatedPlants a. Air Pollution • Chemical discharges into the atmosphere have increased dramatically during this century, but the total effect on plants is virtually unknown. It has been demonstrated that air pollutants can cause mortality and losses in growth of plants. Nearly all species of deciduous and coniferous trees are sensitive to some pollutants. There are many chemicals released into the atmosphere singly and as compounds. In addition, other compounds are synthesized in the atmosphere. Some chemicals can be identified through leaf tissue analysis and by analysing the air. Generally, pollution injury first appears as leaf injury. Spots between the veins, leaf margin discoloration, and tip burns are common. These symptoms can also be influenced by host sensitivity, which is effected by genetic characteristics and environmental factors.
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    b. Herbicide • Herbicidesshould be handled very carefully; misapplication of herbicides can often damage nontarget plants. The total extent of such damage remains unclear, but localized, severe damage occurs. Symptoms of herbicide injury are variable due to chemical mode of action, dosage, duration of expo-sure, plant species, and environmental conditions. Some herbicides cause growth abnormalities such as cupping or twisting of foliage while others cause foliage yellowing or browning, defoliation, or death.