Weeds are plants that grow where they are not wanted, competing with crops and pastures for light, water, and nutrients. The three weeds specified in the VCAA study design — flickweed, gorse, and wild radish — illustrate different weed types (annual, perennial shrub, and annual broadleaf), each requiring different management strategies.
VCAA FOCUS: For each weed, know its biology/characteristics, the type of agricultural/horticultural damage it causes, and the prevention and control strategies appropriate for it.
| Strategy | Detail |
|---|---|
| Prevention | Use certified weed-free growing media; inspect transplants and pot stock for flickweed before accepting; clean tools between areas |
| Manual removal | Pull before flowering and seed set — essential to prevent explosively dispersed seed |
| Cultivation | Shallow cultivation disrupts seedling establishment; however, avoid deep cultivation that buries viable seeds |
| Mulching | Suppresses germination in garden beds and nursery rows |
| Pre-emergent herbicides | Soil-applied residual herbicides (e.g., pendimethalin) prevent germination |
| Post-emergent herbicides | Broadleaf herbicides effective on young plants; check label for crop safety |
KEY TAKEAWAY: The explosive seed dispersal mechanism of flickweed means timing of control is critical — intervene before seed set to avoid spreading seed during removal.
Gorse control requires a long-term, integrated programme due to its seed bank persistence (up to 50 years):
| Strategy | Detail |
|---|---|
| Prevention | Do not allow introduction; inspect machinery and vehicles; no seed movement from infested areas |
| Grazing | Goats and cattle will graze young gorse regrowth — integrated with other control |
| Mechanical control | Bulldozing/slashing followed by grazing or immediate herbicide application; removes above-ground biomass but does not kill root or seed bank |
| Burning | Fire kills above-ground plants and stimulates seed bank germination (seeds require heat for scarification) — must be followed by follow-up treatments as seedlings emerge; burning alone worsens infestations without follow-up |
| Chemical control | Herbicides: fluroxypyr (Starane), picloram, glyphosate (cut-stump method); requires repeat treatment over several years |
| Biological control | Ulex spider mite and gorse psyllid are approved biocontrol agents in Australia; slow to establish but provide long-term suppression |
| Follow-up (critical) | Regular inspection and treatment of regrowth for many years essential due to persistent seed bank |
EXAM TIP: Gorse is an example where a single control method is never sufficient. A long-term integrated approach (mechanical → chemical → biological → follow-up) is required. Burning alone worsens the problem — it must be followed by herbicide application on germinating seedlings.
| Strategy | Detail |
|---|---|
| Prevention | Use certified weed-free seed; clean machinery between paddocks (especially headers); monitor paddocks after harvest |
| Crop competition | High crop seeding rates improve crop competitiveness; narrow row spacing shades weeds |
| Crop rotation | Include non-host crops; use different herbicide modes of action across rotations |
| Pre-sowing herbicides | Apply knockdown herbicides (glyphosate) to control autumn germinating plants before sowing |
| Pre-emergent herbicides | Trifluralin, diflufenican — applied before or at sowing; must be incorporated |
| Post-emergent herbicides | Group B (ALS inhibitors — check resistance status), Group I (phenoxy acids like MCPA) in cereals; rotate modes of action |
| Harvest weed seed control (HWSC) | Chaff cart, narrow windrow burning, or seed destructor (Harrington Seed Destructor) — intercepts seed at harvest, dramatically reduces weed seed return |
| Biological control | Limited options currently under research |
COMMON MISTAKE: Wild radish is not “just a wildflower in the crop” — it is one of Australia’s most economically damaging broadacre weeds. Strong exam answers quantify the damage (yield loss), explain the resistance problem, and describe HWSC as a newer integrated tool.
| Feature | Flickweed | Gorse | Wild Radish |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plant type | Annual herb | Perennial shrub | Annual/biennial herb |
| Family | Brassicaceae | Fabaceae | Brassicaceae |
| Key problem | Horticulture hygiene; explosive seed spread | Pasture invasion; 50+ year seed bank; fire risk | Major broadacre crop weed; herbicide resistance |
| Seed persistence | Several years | 30–50 years | Several years |
| Priority control | Pre-seed set removal; pre-emergent herbicides | Long-term integrated (mechanical + chemical + biological + follow-up) | HWSC + herbicide rotation; crop competition |
| Herbicide resistance? | Minor | No | Yes — major concern |