Integrated Weed Management (IWM) is a strategic, systems-based approach to controlling weeds that combines multiple methods in a coordinated, long-term programme. Like IPM for pests, IWM moves away from sole reliance on herbicides toward a combination of cultural, physical, biological, and chemical tools, with particular emphasis on preventing weed seed set and soil seed bank replenishment.
VCAA FOCUS: Students must distinguish between IWM principles (the strategic framework) and individual control methods. An integrated approach considers the long-term, uses multiple tactics, and addresses both the weed plants and the weed seed bank.
The most important principle — zero seed set from any escaped weeds is the goal.
$$\text{Seeds added to soil} - \text{Seeds depleted} = \text{Change in seed bank}$$
Tactics to prevent seed set:
- Harvest before weeds ripen (not always practical)
- Spot-spray escapes before flowering
- Harvest weed seed control (HWSC) — collect, destroy, or burn weed seeds at harvest time
Relying on one method (particularly one herbicide) is the path to resistance. IWM combines:
| Method Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Cultural/agronomic | Crop rotation, competitive varieties, optimal seeding rate and timing, strategic fallowing |
| Physical/mechanical | Cultivation (strategic), hay cutting, mowing, burning, tillage |
| Biological | Grazing (targeted, strategic), approved biocontrol agents |
| Chemical | Herbicides from multiple modes of action, applied at threshold |
| Harvest weed seed control | Chaff carts, narrow windrow burning, seed destructors |
Herbicide rotation is fundamental to IWM:
Key MOA groups in Australian cropping:
| Group | Site of Action | Example herbicides |
|—|—|—|
| A | ACCase inhibitors | Fusilade, Verdict, Achieve |
| B | ALS inhibitors | Lontrel, Ally, Glean |
| C | PSII inhibitors | atrazine, simazine |
| D/22 | PSI disruptor | paraquat, diquat |
| G/9 | EPSP synthase | glyphosate |
| I | Synthetic auxins | 2,4-D, MCPA, fluroxypyr |
EXAM TIP: “Rotating modes of action” does not mean simply alternating between two products from the same group. Group rotation is the key — different sites of action.
A newer, highly effective IWM tool specifically designed to address broadacre weed seed bank issues:
| HWSC Method | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Chaff cart | Chaff fraction (where seeds concentrate) collected in a cart; material destroyed (burned, buried, or composted) |
| Narrow windrow burning | Chaff deposited in narrow row; burned after harvest |
| Seed destructor / Harrington Seed Destructor | Cage mill destroys seeds during harvest; no external burning needed |
| Chaff lining | Chaff deposited in a single narrow strip between wheat rows; high seed density kills most seeds through disease |
KEY TAKEAWAY: HWSC targets the annual seed production — preventing seeds from returning to the soil seed bank. Combined with herbicide rotation and competitive crops, HWSC is transforming weed management in Australian grain production.
Step 1: MAP weed populations across paddocks
Step 2: IDENTIFY species and assess seed bank history
Step 3: SELECT rotation and variety to improve crop competition
Step 4: PLAN herbicide sequence (rotate MOA groups)
Step 5: MONITOR during season — assess control
Step 6: CONTROL escapes before seed set (spot spray, chipping)
Step 7: IMPLEMENT HWSC at harvest
Step 8: RECORD all actions for future planning
| System | Key IWM Tools |
|---|---|
| Broadacre cropping (grain) | Crop rotation, competitive varieties, herbicide rotation, HWSC, fallow management |
| Pasture | Grazing management, pasture renovation, strategic herbicide use, competitive perennial species |
| Horticulture | Mulching, cultivation, pre-emergent herbicides, clean planting material, weed-free irrigation water |
| Perennial crops (orchards, vineyards) | Under-vine management (mulch, cultivation, herbicide strip), cover crops between rows |
Integrated Weed Management is a long-term, systems-based approach that combines cultural, physical, biological, and chemical strategies to manage weeds sustainably. Its core principles — preventing seed set, using multiple diverse tactics, rotating herbicide modes of action, and implementing harvest weed seed control — directly address the root causes of weed problems: seed bank build-up and herbicide resistance. Successful IWM requires knowledge, planning, record-keeping, and a multi-year commitment.