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A Framework for Understanding Crop–Weed Competition in Agroecosystems

Aleksandra Savić, Aleksandar Popović, Sanja Đurović, Boris Pisinov, U Milan, Marijana Jovanović Todorović

2025Agronomy10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Competition is a fundamental ecological interaction among plants, arising when species utilise the same limited resources such as light, water, nutrients, and space. Resource limitations reduce the growth and survival of less competitive species, altering ecosystem structure. In agroecosystems, weed–crop competition is a major challenge, reducing yield and quality. Weeds often exhibit greater adaptability and resource efficiency, enabling them to outcompete crops. Competition intensity is influenced by population density, morphology, phenology and survival strategies. Understanding plant competitive interactions is crucial for ecologists and agronomists to develop sustainable weed management and resource optimization strategies. Climate change further alters competitive dynamics, favoring resilient and plastic species. Mechanisms like allelopathy, aboveground and belowground competition and adaptive growth responses shape community structure. Strategies to reduce weed pressure include breeding competitive crops and integrating cultural practices such as optimal sowing density, narrow row spacing, and cover cropping. Future research should address plant responses to multiple simultaneous stressors, the ecological role of allelochemicals under varying conditions, and the genetic mechanisms of competitive adaptability. A comprehensive understanding of these interactions is essential for designing resilient, high-performing agroecosystems in changing environmental conditions.

Topics & Concepts

Competition (biology)AdaptabilityEcosystemWeedEcologyResource (disambiguation)AllelopathyAgroecosystemPopulationClimate changeResource Acquisition Is InitializationPhenologyAgroforestryAgricultureBiologyEnvironmental resource managementCompetitive advantagePopulation growthSustainabilityWeed controlEcosystem managementNatural resource economicsBusinessEcological stabilityEcosystem servicesHerbivoreEnvironmental sciencePlant communityAdaptive strategiesAdaptation (eye)Restoration ecologyAgricultural Innovations and PracticesAgronomic Practices and Intercropping Systems
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