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Full-Text Articles in Agronomy and Crop Sciences
The Potential For Skeleton Weed, John Dodd, F. D. Panetta
The Potential For Skeleton Weed, John Dodd, F. D. Panetta
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Since its introduction into Australia during the 900s skeleton weed has become one of the most economically significant weeds. Its presence in cereal crops in south-eastern Australia has caused suvere yield reductions and harvesting problems.
Skeleton weed was first found on a Western Australian farm in 963. Since then it has been the subject of an intensive eradication campaign organised by the Agricultural Protection Board and funded by an annual levy on wheat growers. Such campaigns, which rely mainly on volunteer searchers, do not exist in eastern Australia because the weed is so widespread it would be impossible to eradicate. …