Herbicide resistance modelling: past, present and future

Pest Manag Sci. 2014 Sep;70(9):1394-404. doi: 10.1002/ps.3773. Epub 2014 Apr 28.

Abstract

Computer simulation modelling is an essential aid in building an integrated understanding of how different factors interact to affect the evolutionary and population dynamics of herbicide resistance, and thus in helping to predict and manage how agricultural systems will be affected. In this review, we first discuss why computer simulation modelling is such an important tool and framework for dealing with herbicide resistance. We then explain what questions related to herbicide resistance have been addressed to date using simulation modelling, and discuss the modelling approaches that have been used, focusing first on the earlier, more general approaches, and then on some newer, more innovative approaches. We then consider how these approaches could be further developed in the future, by drawing on modelling techniques that are already employed in other areas, such as individual-based and spatially explicit modelling approaches, as well as the possibility of better representing genetics, competition and economics, and finally the questions and issues of importance to herbicide resistance research and management that could be addressed using these new approaches are discussed. We conclude that it is necessary to proceed with caution when increasing the complexity of models by adding new details, but, with appropriate care, more detailed models will make it possible to integrate more current knowledge in order better to understand, predict and ultimately manage the evolution of herbicide resistance.

Keywords: computer; evolution; genetics; integration; simulation.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Biological Evolution
  • Computer Simulation
  • Herbicide Resistance*
  • Herbicides / pharmacology
  • Plant Weeds / drug effects*
  • Plant Weeds / genetics*
  • Population Dynamics
  • Weed Control / methods

Substances

  • Herbicides