Herbicides

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  1. Types of weeds perennial dicotyledonous Remove This Item
  2. Types of weeds perennial monocotyledonous Remove This Item
  3. Against Wild mustard Remove This Item

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Types of weeds  
 
Crops  
 
Against  
  1. Wild mustard 9 items
  2. Barnyard grass 8 items
  3. Bindii 6 items
  4. Black bindweed 2 items
  5. Black nightshade 2 items
  6. Brown beetle grass 4 items
  7. Brown salwood 2 items
  8. Burr medic 2 items
  9. Caltrop 4 items
  10. Camphor Laurel 2 items
  11. Canary grass 5 items
  12. Capeweed 15 items
  13. Carpet grass 4 items
  14. Carrot Weed 1 item
  15. Castor oil plant 2 items
  16. Catsear 6 items
  17. Chamomile 1 item
  18. Charlock 5 items
  19. Chickweed 12 items
  20. Chinese celtis 1 item
  21. Cleavers 2 items
  22. Climbing buckwheat 5 items
  23. Clover 13 items
  24. Cobblers pegs 5 items
  25. Cockspur thorn 1 item
  26. Columbus grass 1 item
  27. Common ice-plant 4 items
  28. Common peppercress 1 item
  29. Common thistle 1 item
  30. Corn gromwell 1 item
  31. Cotula 3 items
  32. Couch grass 5 items
  33. Cowvine 2 items
  34. Crab grass 2 items
  35. Creeping buttercup 3 items
  36. Creeping oxalis 4 items
  37. Crofton weed 5 items
  38. Crowsfoot grass 3 items
  39. Cudweed 7 items
  40. Cumbungi 4 items
  41. Curled dock 2 items
  42. Dawson gum 2 items
  43. Deadnettle 5 items
  44. Devils rope 1 item
  45. Docks 2 items
  46. Doublegee 9 items
  47. English ivy 2 items
  48. Eucalypt 2 items
  49. False sandalwood 2 items
  50. Fat hen 6 items
  51. Fennel 2 items
  52. Field madder 1 item
  53. Fierce thornapple 1 item
  54. Fireweed 1 item
  55. Flannel weed 1 item
  56. Flatweed 5 items
  57. Fleabane 4 items
  58. Fog grass 1 item
  59. Fumitory 6 items
  60. Goosegrass 1 item
  61. Hoary cress 4 items
  62. Johnson grass 6 items
  63. Large crabgrass 1 item
  64. Moss 1 item
  65. Mullumbimby 1 item
  66. Nutgrass 2 items
  67. Prickly lettuce 1 item
  68. Redroot pigweed 1 item
  69. Shepherd's purse 3 items
  70. Silver grass 5 items
  71. Silverleaf nightshade 5 items
  72. Sisal hemp 1 item
  73. Slender thistles 1 item
  74. Smooth tree pear 2 items
  75. Snakeweed 1 item
  76. Soldier Thistle 4 items
  77. Sorrel seedlings 10 items
  78. Soursob 4 items
  79. Sow thistle 6 items
  80. Spear saltbush 4 items
  81. Spiny burgrass 5 items
  82. Spiny emex 1 item
  83. Spinyhead sida 1 item
  84. Spurge 4 items
  85. St John's wort 7 items
  86. Star-of-Bethlehem 1 item
  87. Starburr 1 item
  88. Sub clover 4 items
  89. Summer grass 4 items
  90. Sweet briar 6 items
  91. Tares 4 items
  92. Thistles 5 items
  93. Thornapple 5 items
  94. Three cornered jack 1 item
  95. Three-hornes bedstraw 1 item
  96. Tiger pear 2 items
  97. Tree Violet 1 item
  98. Tree hogweed 5 items
  99. Tree of heaven 2 items
  100. Turnip weed 6 items
  101. Turpentine bush 2 items
  102. Variegated thistle 5 items
  103. Vetches 4 items
  104. Volunteer sunflower 1 item
  105. Wandering Jew 1 item
  106. Wards weed 4 items
  107. Wattles 3 items
  108. Wheel cactus 1 item
  109. Wild gooseberry 1 item
  110. Wild oat 6 items
  111. Wild radish 6 items
  112. Wild turnip 10 items
  113. Willowherb 2 items
  114. Winter grass 10 items
  115. Wireweed 4 items
  116. Yellow foxtail 1 item
  117. Yellow vine 1 item
  118. Yellow-wood 2 items
  119. Yorkshire Fog Grass 1 item
 
Active Substances  
 
Timing of application  
 
Manufacturer  
 
Application Type  
 
Formulations  
 
Destination use  
 

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Herbicides are chemicals used for the control of unwanted plants, and they are also known as weed killers. They can be classified based on weed control spectrum, labelled crop usage, chemical families, mode of action, application timing or method, but the two main categories of herbicides are selective and non-selective. The former is used to control specific species of weeds, leaving the crops unharmed, while the latter is mostly applied in order to clear waste ground, as they kill all the plants they come in contact with. Herbicides are widely used in agriculture and in landscape turf management.

Due to the powerful chemicals used, herbicides need to be applied according to their instructions, as they can have health effects on the person that uses them, or, due to surface runoffs, they can easily get transported and contaminate different surfaces then the ones applied on. If misused, they can cause residual soil or water contamination.

Be sure to select the appropriate product for your situation, and to follow the label directions accordingly.