This book clearly defines ways to maximize the allelopathic potential of
important field crops for controlling weeds, either in the same crop or
others. Compared to the use of herbicides, allelopathy is an attractive
option to control weeds naturally under field conditions. The book
highlights the allelopathic potential of several important cereals
(wheat, maize, rice, barley, sorghum, rye) and two oilseed crops
[sunflower and canola (as well as some other member of Brassicaceae
family)]. Further, the book explains how the allelopathic potential of
these crops can be manipulated under field conditions to suppress weeds.
This is possible by growing allelopathic crop cultivars, using mulches
from allelopathic crops, intercropping an allelopathic crop with a
non-allelopathic crop, including allelopathic crops in crop rotation, or
using allelopathic crops as cover crops. Equipped with several basic
concepts of allelopathy, this book will be highly useful for the farming
community as well as students and researchers.