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Wikipedia

Weed

A weed is a plant considered undesirable in a particular situation, growing where it conflicts with human preferences, needs, or goals.[1][2][3][4] Plants with characteristics that make them hazardous, aesthetically unappealing, difficult to control in managed environments, or otherwise unwanted in farm land, orchards, gardens, lawns, parks, recreational spaces, residential and industrial areas, may all be considered weeds.[4][2][5] The concept of weeds is particularly significant in agriculture, where the presence of weeds in fields used to grow crops may cause major losses in yields.[6] Invasive species, plants introduced to an environment where their presence negatively impacts the overall functioning and biodiversity of the ecosystem, may also sometimes be considered weeds.[7][8]

Weeds growing in the cracks of a concrete staircase

Taxonomically, the term "weed" has no botanical significance, because a plant that is a weed in one context, is not a weed when growing in a situation where it is wanted. Some plants that are widely regarded as weeds are intentionally grown in gardens and other cultivated settings. For this reason, some plants are sometimes called beneficial weeds. Similarly, volunteer plants from a previous crop are regarded as weeds when growing in a subsequent crop. Thus, alternative nomenclature for the same plants might be hardy pioneers, cosmopolitan species, volunteers, "spontaneous urban vegetation," etc.[9]

Although whether a plant is a weed depends on context, plants commonly defined as weeds broadly share biological characteristics that allow them to thrive in disturbed environments and to be particularly difficult to destroy or eradicate. In particular, weeds are adapted to thrive under human management in the same way as intentionally grown plants.[1] Since the origins of agriculture on Earth, agricultural weeds have co-evolved with human crops and agricultural systems, and some have been domesticated into crops themselves after their fitness in agricultural settings became apparent.[10]

More broadly, the term "weed" is occasionally applied pejoratively to species outside the plant kingdom, species that can survive in diverse environments and reproduce quickly; in this sense it has even been applied to humans.[11]

Weed control is important in agriculture and horticulture. Methods include hand cultivation with hoes, powered cultivation with cultivators, smothering with mulch or soil solarization, lethal wilting with high heat, burning, or chemical attack with herbicides and cultural methods such as crop rotation and fallowing land to reduce the weed population.[12]

History

It has long been assumed that weeds, in the sense of rapidly-evolving plants taking advantage of human-disturbed environments, evolved in response to the Neolithic agricultural revolution approximately 12,000 years ago. However, researchers have found evidence of "proto-weeds" behaving in similar ways at Ohalo II, a 23,000-year-old archeological site in Israel.[13]

Concept

The idea of "weeds" as a category of undesirable plant has not been universal throughout history. Before 1200 A.D., little evidence exists of concern with weed control or of agricultural practices solely intended to control weeds. Though the plants are not named using a specific term denoting a "weed" in the contemporary sense, plants that may be interpreted as "weeds" are referenced in the Bible:[8]

Cursed is the ground because of you; through painful toil you will eat of it all the days of your life. It will produce thorns and thistles for you, and you will eat the plants of the field. By the sweat of your brow you will eat your food until you return to the ground.[14]

Some early Roman writers referenced weeding activities in agricultural fields, but weed control in the pre-modern era was probably an incidental effect of plowing.[15] Ancient Egyptians, Assyrians, and Sumerians had no specific word for "weeds," seeing all plants as having some use. The English word "weed" can be traced back to the Old English weod, which refers to woad, rather than a category of plant as in the modern usage; in early medieval European herbals, each plant is regarded as having its own "virtues".[16]

By the sixteenth century, the concept of a "weed" was better defined as a "noxious" or undesirable type of plant, as referenced metaphorically in William Shakespeare's works.[16] An example of a Shakespearean reference to weeds is found in Sonnet 69:

To thy fair flower add the rank smell of weeds: / But why thy odour matcheth not thy show, / The soil is this, that thou dost common grow.[17]

After the Reformation, Christian theology that emphasized the degradation of nature after the Fall of Man, and humankind's role and duty to dominate and subdue nature, became more developed and widespread. Various European writers designated certain plants as "vermin" and "filth," though many plants identified as such were valued by gardeners or by herbalists and apothecaries, and some questioned the idea that any plant could be without purpose or value.[16] Laws mandating the control of weeds emerged as early as the seventeenth century; in 1691 a law in New York required the removal of "poysonous and Stincking Weeds" in front of houses.[18]

The cultural association between weeds and moral or spiritual degradation persisted into the last nineteenth century in American cities. Urban expansion and development created ideal habitats for weeds in nineteenth-century America.[18] Reformers consequently saw weeds as a part of the larger problem of filth, disease, and moral corruption that plagued the urban environments, and weeds were seen as refuge for "tramps" and other criminal or undesirable people. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch credited weeds as causing diphtheria, scarlet fever, and typhoid.[18] In St. Louis between the years of 1905-1910, weeds became viewed as a major public health hazard, believed to cause typhoid and malaria, and legal precedents were set in order to control weeds that would help facilitate the adoption of weed control laws throughout the country.[18]

Ecological significance

 
A dandelion is a common plant all over the world, especially in Europe, Asia, and the Americas. It is considered a weed in some contexts (such as lawns) but not others (such as when it is grown as a vegetable or herbal medicine).

"Weed" as a category of plant overlaps with the closely related concepts of ruderal and pioneer species.[19] Pioneer species are specifically adapted to disturbed environments, where the existing plant and soil community has been disrupted or damaged in some way. Adaptation to disturbance can give weeds advantages over desirable crops, pastures, or ornamental plants. The nature of the habitat and its disturbances will affect or even determine which types of weed communities become dominant.[20] In weed ecology some authorities speak of the relationship between "the three Ps": plant, place, perception. These have been very variously defined, but the weed traits listed by H.G. Baker are widely cited.[21][22]

Examples of such ruderal or pioneer species include plants that are adapted to naturally-occurring disturbed environments such as dunes and other windswept areas with shifting soils, alluvial flood plains, river banks and deltas, and areas that are burned repeatedly.[23] Since human agricultural and horticultural practices often mimic these natural disturbances that weedy species have adapted for, some weeds are effectively preadapted to grow and proliferate in human-disturbed areas such as agricultural fields, lawns, gardens, roadsides, and construction sites. As agricultural practices continue and develop, weeds evolve further, with humans exerting evolutionary pressure upon weeds through manipulating their habitat and attempting to control weed populations.[10]

Due to their ability to survive and thrive in conditions challenging or hostile to other plants, weeds have been considered extremophiles.[24]

Adaptability

Due to their evolutionary heritage as disturbance-adapted pioneers, most weeds exhibit incredibly high phenotype plasticity, meaning that individual plants hold the potential to adapt their morphology, growth, and appearance in response to their conditions.[19] The potential within a single individual to adapt to a wide variety of conditions is sometimes referred to as an "all-purpose genotype."[25] Disturbance-adapted plants typically grow rapidly and reproduce quickly, with some annual weeds having multiple generations in a single growing season. They commonly have seeds that persist in the soil seed bank for many years. Perennial weeds often have underground stems that spread under the soil surface or, like ground ivy (Glechoma hederacea), have creeping stems that root and spread out over the ground.[26] These traits make many disturbance-adapted plants highly successful as weeds.[19]

On top of the ability of individual plants to adapt to their conditions, weed populations also evolve much more quickly than older models of evolution account for.[25] Once established in an agricultural setting, weeds have been observed to undergo evolutionary changes to adapt to selective pressures imposed by human management. Some examples include changes in seed dormancy, changes in seasonal life cycles, changes in plant morphology, and the evolution of resistance to herbicides.[10] Rapid life cycles, large populations, and ability to spread large numbers of seeds long distances also allow weed species with these general characteristics to evolve quickly.[27]

Dispersal

The concept of weeds also overlaps with the concept of invasive species, both in the sense that human activities tend to introduce weeds outside their native range, and that an introduced species may be considered a weed. Many weed species have moved out of their natural geographic ranges and spread around the world in tandem with human migrations and commerce. Weed seeds are often collected and transported with crops after the harvesting of grains, so humans are a vector of transport as well as a producer of the disturbed environments to which weed species are well adapted, resulting in many weeds having a close association with human activities.[28][29]

Some plants become dominant when introduced into new environments because the animals and plants in their original environment that compete with them or feed on them are absent; in what is sometimes called the "natural enemies hypothesis", plants freed from these specialist consumers may become dominant. An example is Klamath weed, which threatened millions of hectares of prime grain and grazing land in North America after it was accidentally introduced. The Klamathweed Beetle, a species that specializes in consuming the plant, was imported during World War II. Within several years Klamath weed was reduced to a rare roadside weed.[30][31] In locations where predation and mutually competitive relationships are absent, weeds have increased resources available for growth and reproduction. The weediness of some species that are introduced into new environments may be caused by their production of allelopathic chemicals which indigenous plants are not yet adapted to, a scenario sometimes called the "novel weapons hypothesis". These chemicals may limit the growth of established plants or the germination and growth of seeds and seedlings.[32][33] Weed growth can also inhibit the growth of later-successional species in ecological succession. [34]

Introduced species have been observed to undergo rapid evolutionary change to adapt to their new environments, with changes in plant height, size, leaf shape, dispersal ability, reproductive output, vegetative reproduction ability, level of dependence on the mycorrhizal network, and level of phenotype plasticity appearing on timescales of decades to centuries.[35] Invasive species can be more adaptable in their new environments than in their native environments, occupying broader ranges in areas where they are invasive than in areas where they are native. Hybridization between similar species can produce novel invasive plants that are better adapted to their surroundings. Polyploidy is also observed to be strongly selected for among some invasive populations, such as Solidago canadensis in China. Many weed species are now found almost worldwide, with novel adaptations that suit regional populations to their environments.[25]

Negative impacts

 
Invasive Canada Goldenrod as a roadside weed in Poland
 
Australia, 1907: Cattlemen survey 700 carcasses of cattle that were killed overnight by a poisonous plant.[36]

Some negative impacts of weeds are functional: they interfere with food and fiber production in agriculture, wherein they must be controlled to prevent lost or diminished crop yields. In other settings, they interfere with other cosmetic, decorative, or recreational goals, such as in lawns, landscape architecture, playing fields, and golf courses. In the case of invasive species, they can be of concern for environmental reasons, when introduced species outcompete native plants and cause broader damage to ecosystem health and functioning.[37] Some weed species have been classified as noxious weeds by government authorities because, if left unchecked, they often compete with native or crop plants or cause harm to livestock.[38] They are often foreign species accidentally or imprudently imported into a region where there are few natural controls to limit their population and spread.[39]

In a range of contexts, weeds can have negative impacts by:

  • competing with the desired plants for the resources that a plant typically needs, namely, direct sunlight, soil nutrients, water, and (to a lesser extent) space for growth;
  • providing hosts and vectors for plant pathogens, giving them greater opportunity to infect and degrade the quality of the desired plants;
  • providing food or shelter for animal pests such as seed-eating birds and Tephritid fruit flies that otherwise could hardly survive seasonal shortages;[40]
  • offering irritation to the skin or digestive tracts of people or animals, either physical irritation via thorns, prickles, or burs, or chemical irritation via natural poisons or irritants in the weed (for example, the poisons found in Nerium species);[41]
  • causing root damage to engineering works such as drains, road surfaces, and foundations,[42] blocking streams and rivulets.[43]

Positive impacts

"What would the world be, once bereft,
of wet and wildness? Let them be left.
O let them be left; wildness and wet;
Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet."

— Gerard Manley Hopkins' poem Inversnaid

While the term "weed" generally has a negative connotation, many plants known as weeds can have beneficial properties. A number of weeds, such as the dandelion (Taraxacum) and lamb's quarter, are edible, and their leaves or roots may be used for food or herbal medicine. Burdock is common over much of the world, and is sometimes used to make soup and medicine in East Asia.[44] Some weeds attract beneficial insects, which in turn can protect crops from harmful pests. Weeds can also prevent pest insects from finding a crop, because their presence disrupts the incidence of positive cues which pests use to locate their food. Weeds may also act as a "living mulch", providing ground cover that reduces moisture loss and prevents erosion. Weeds may also improve soil fertility; dandelions, for example, bring up nutrients like calcium and nitrogen from deep in the soil with their tap root, and clover hosts nitrogen-fixing bacteria in its roots, fertilizing the soil directly. The dandelion is also one of several species which break up hardpan in overly-cultivated fields, helping crops grow deeper root systems. Some garden flowers originated as weeds in cultivated fields and have been selectively bred for their garden-worthy flowers or foliage. An example of a crop weed that is grown in gardens is the corncockle, (Agrostemma githago), which was a common weed in European wheat fields, but is now sometimes grown as a garden plant.[45]

Ecological role

As pioneer species, weeds begin the process of ecological succession after a disturbance event. The rapid, aggressive growth of weeds rapidly prevents erosion in newly exposed bare soil, and has substantially slowed topsoil loss due to anthropogenic disturbances.[46]

In climate change adaptation

It has been suggested that weeds, with their aggressive ability to adapt, could provide humans with vital tools and knowledge for climate change adaptation. Some researchers argue that researching weed species could offer valuable insights for crop breeding, or that weeds themselves hold potential as hardy, climate-change-resistant crops. Adaptable weeds could also be a source of transgenic genes which could confer useful traits upon crops.[19]

Weed species have been used in the restoration of land in Australia using a method called natural sequence farming. This method allows non-native weeds to stabilize and restore degraded areas where native species are not yet capable of regenerating themselves.[47]

Weeds as adaptable species

"We've got to be one of the most bomb-proof species on the planet."

— Paleontologist David Jablonsky[11]

An alternate definition often used by biologists is any species, not just plants, that can quickly adapt to any environment.[11] Some traits of weedy species are the ability to reproduce quickly, disperse widely, live in a variety of habitats, establish a population in strange places, succeed in disturbed ecosystems and resist eradication once established. Such species often do well in human-dominated environments as other species are not able to adapt. Common examples include the common pigeon, brown rat and the raccoon. Other weedy species have been able to expand their range without actually living in human environments, as human activity has damaged the ecosystems of other species. These include the coyote, the white-tailed deer and the brown headed cowbird.[11]

In response to the idea that humans may face extinction due to environmental degradation, paleontologist David Jablonsky counters by arguing that humans are a weed species. Like other weedy species, humans are widely dispersed in a wide variety of environments, and are highly unlikely to go extinct no matter how much damage the environment faces.[11]

Plants often considered to be weeds

 
White clover

White clover is considered by some to be a weed in lawns, but in many other situations is a desirable source of fodder, honey and soil nitrogen.[48][49]

A short list of some plants that often are considered to be weeds follows:

Many invasive weeds were introduced deliberately in the first place, and may have not been considered nuisances at the time, but rather beneficial.

Weed control

 
A field of beets being weeded in Colorado, United States, in 1972

Weed control encompasses a range of methods used by humans to stop, reduce or prevent the growth and reproduction of weeds within agricultural or other managed environments. Some weed control is preventative, implementing protocols to stop weeds from invading new areas. Cultural weed control involves shaping the managed environment to make it less favorable for weeds.[52][53] Once weeds are present in an area, a wide variety of means to destroy the weeds and their seeds can be employed. Since weeds are highly adaptable, relying on a single method to control weeds soon results in the invasion or adaptation of weeds that are not susceptible. Integrated pest management as it applies to weeds refers to a plan of controlling weeds that integrates multiple methods of weed control and prevention.[54]

Methods of preventative weed control include cleaning equipment, stopping existing weeds in nearby areas from producing seed, and avoiding seed or manure that could be contaminated with weeds.[55] A wide variety of cultural weed control methods are used, including cover cropping, crop rotation, selecting the most competitive cultivars of crops, mulching, planting with optimal density, and intercropping.[56]

Mechanical methods of weed control involve physically cutting, uprooting, or otherwise destroying weeds. On small farms, hand weeding is the dominant means of weed control, but as larger farms dominate agriculture, this method becomes less feasible.[6] On many operations, however, some hand-weeding may be an unavoidable component of weed control.[53] Tillage, mowing, and burning are common examples of mechanical weed control on larger scales. New technology increases the range of mechanical weed control options. One newly emerging form of mechanical weed control uses electricity to kill weeds.[57]

Mechanical weed control has been increasingly replaced by the use of herbicides.[58] The reliance on herbicides has resulted in the rapid evolution of herbicide resistance in weeds, making previously effective herbicide treatments useless for the control of weeds.[59] In particular, glyphosate, which was once considered a revolutionary breakthrough in weed control, was relied upon heavily when it was first introduced to agriculture, resulting in rapid emergence of resistance.[60] As of 2023, 58 weed species have developed resistance to glyphosate.[61]

Herbicide resistance in weeds has rapidly developed into new, increasingly challenging forms as the plants continually evolve. Non-target site resistance, or NTSR, is particularly difficult to counteract, since it may confer resistance to multiple herbicides at once, including herbicides the plants' ancestors were never exposed to.[62] Various methods of adjusting herbicide application to avoid resistance, such as rotating herbicides used and tank mixing herbicides, have all been questioned in terms of their efficacy for preventing resistance from arising.[63]

Understanding the habit of weeds is important for non-chemical methods of weed control, such as plowing, surface scuffling, promotion of more beneficial cover crops, and prevention of seed accumulation in fields. For example, amaranth is an edible plant that is considered a weed by mainstream modern agriculture. It produces copious seeds (up to 1 million per plant) that last many years, and is an early-emergent fast grower. Those seeking to control amaranth quote the mantra "This year’s seeds become next year’s weeds!".[64] However, another view of amaranth values the plant as a resilient food source.[65]

Some people have appreciated weeds for their tenacity, their wildness and even the work and connection to nature they provide. As Christopher Lloyd wrote in The Well-Tempered Garden:

Many gardeners will agree that hand-weeding is not the terrible drudgery that it is often made out to be. Some people find in it a kind of soothing monotony. It leaves their minds free to develop the plot for their next novel or to perfect the brilliant repartee with which they should have encountered a relative's latest example of unreasonableness.[66]

Under climate change

As anthropogenic climate change increases temperatures and atmospheric carbon dioxide, many weeds are expected to become harder to control and to expand their ranges, at the expense of less "weedy" species. For example, kudzu, the infamous invasive vine found throughout the Southeastern United States, is expected to spread northward due to climate change. Increased competitive strength of agricultural weeds in future climate conditions threaten future ability to grow crops. Existing weed management practices will likely fail under future changes in climate conditions, meaning new agricultural techniques will be needed for global food security. Suggested techniques are holistic, transitioning away from reliance on herbicide, and include aggressive adaptation of agroforestry and use of allelopathic crop residues to suppress weeds.[67]

See also

References

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  61. ^ "Number of Resistant Species to Individual Active Herbicides". weedscience.org.
  62. ^ Brown, H. Claire (18 August 2021). "Attack of the Superweeds". The New York Times.
  63. ^ Quinn, Lauren. "Tank mixing herbicides may not be enough to avoid herbicide resistance". farmers advance.com.
  64. ^ "The Biology and Ecology of Palmer Amaranth: Implications for Control". UGA extension. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  65. ^ "Rethinking a Weed: the Truth about Amaranth". Our World. United Nations University.
  66. ^ Christopher Lloyd, The Well-Tempered Garden, 1973
  67. ^ Anwar, Parvez; Islam, A.K.M. Mominul; Yeasmin, Sabina; Rashid, Harun; Juraimi, Abdul Shukor; Ahmed, Sharif; Shrestha, Anil (2021). "Weeds and Their Responses to Management Efforts in A Changing Climate". Agronomy. 11 (10): 1921. doi:10.3390/agronomy11101921.

External links

  • IUCN Invasive Species Specialist Group
  • New Mexico State University Weeds Page (includes identification tool)
  • New Mexico State University Department of Entomology Plant Pathology and Weed Science
  • Global Invasive Species Database 2010-11-05 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Volunteer Plant" definition 2020-08-10 at the Wayback Machine
  • Lucid Multi-access key to invasive terrestrial plants in Europe (140 species, 41 characters)
  • Lucid multi-access key: Weeds of Australia Identification Tool. Queensland Government. (1021 species, 55 characters)

weed, this, article, about, plants, specifically, called, weeds, psychoactive, plant, commonly, called, weed, cannabis, drug, other, uses, disambiguation, weed, plant, considered, undesirable, particular, situation, growing, where, conflicts, with, human, pref. This article is about plants specifically called weeds For the psychoactive plant commonly called weed see Cannabis drug For other uses see Weed disambiguation A weed is a plant considered undesirable in a particular situation growing where it conflicts with human preferences needs or goals 1 2 3 4 Plants with characteristics that make them hazardous aesthetically unappealing difficult to control in managed environments or otherwise unwanted in farm land orchards gardens lawns parks recreational spaces residential and industrial areas may all be considered weeds 4 2 5 The concept of weeds is particularly significant in agriculture where the presence of weeds in fields used to grow crops may cause major losses in yields 6 Invasive species plants introduced to an environment where their presence negatively impacts the overall functioning and biodiversity of the ecosystem may also sometimes be considered weeds 7 8 Weeds growing in the cracks of a concrete staircaseTaxonomically the term weed has no botanical significance because a plant that is a weed in one context is not a weed when growing in a situation where it is wanted Some plants that are widely regarded as weeds are intentionally grown in gardens and other cultivated settings For this reason some plants are sometimes called beneficial weeds Similarly volunteer plants from a previous crop are regarded as weeds when growing in a subsequent crop Thus alternative nomenclature for the same plants might be hardy pioneers cosmopolitan species volunteers spontaneous urban vegetation etc 9 Although whether a plant is a weed depends on context plants commonly defined as weeds broadly share biological characteristics that allow them to thrive in disturbed environments and to be particularly difficult to destroy or eradicate In particular weeds are adapted to thrive under human management in the same way as intentionally grown plants 1 Since the origins of agriculture on Earth agricultural weeds have co evolved with human crops and agricultural systems and some have been domesticated into crops themselves after their fitness in agricultural settings became apparent 10 More broadly the term weed is occasionally applied pejoratively to species outside the plant kingdom species that can survive in diverse environments and reproduce quickly in this sense it has even been applied to humans 11 Weed control is important in agriculture and horticulture Methods include hand cultivation with hoes powered cultivation with cultivators smothering with mulch or soil solarization lethal wilting with high heat burning or chemical attack with herbicides and cultural methods such as crop rotation and fallowing land to reduce the weed population 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Concept 2 Ecological significance 2 1 Adaptability 2 2 Dispersal 3 Negative impacts 4 Positive impacts 4 1 Ecological role 4 2 In climate change adaptation 5 Weeds as adaptable species 6 Plants often considered to be weeds 7 Weed control 7 1 Under climate change 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistoryIt has long been assumed that weeds in the sense of rapidly evolving plants taking advantage of human disturbed environments evolved in response to the Neolithic agricultural revolution approximately 12 000 years ago However researchers have found evidence of proto weeds behaving in similar ways at Ohalo II a 23 000 year old archeological site in Israel 13 Concept The idea of weeds as a category of undesirable plant has not been universal throughout history Before 1200 A D little evidence exists of concern with weed control or of agricultural practices solely intended to control weeds Though the plants are not named using a specific term denoting a weed in the contemporary sense plants that may be interpreted as weeds are referenced in the Bible 8 Cursed is the ground because of you through painful toil you will eat of it all the days of your life It will produce thorns and thistles for you and you will eat the plants of the field By the sweat of your brow you will eat your food until you return to the ground 14 Some early Roman writers referenced weeding activities in agricultural fields but weed control in the pre modern era was probably an incidental effect of plowing 15 Ancient Egyptians Assyrians and Sumerians had no specific word for weeds seeing all plants as having some use The English word weed can be traced back to the Old English weod which refers to woad rather than a category of plant as in the modern usage in early medieval European herbals each plant is regarded as having its own virtues 16 By the sixteenth century the concept of a weed was better defined as a noxious or undesirable type of plant as referenced metaphorically in William Shakespeare s works 16 An example of a Shakespearean reference to weeds is found in Sonnet 69 To thy fair flower add the rank smell of weeds But why thy odour matcheth not thy show The soil is this that thou dost common grow 17 After the Reformation Christian theology that emphasized the degradation of nature after the Fall of Man and humankind s role and duty to dominate and subdue nature became more developed and widespread Various European writers designated certain plants as vermin and filth though many plants identified as such were valued by gardeners or by herbalists and apothecaries and some questioned the idea that any plant could be without purpose or value 16 Laws mandating the control of weeds emerged as early as the seventeenth century in 1691 a law in New York required the removal of poysonous and Stincking Weeds in front of houses 18 The cultural association between weeds and moral or spiritual degradation persisted into the last nineteenth century in American cities Urban expansion and development created ideal habitats for weeds in nineteenth century America 18 Reformers consequently saw weeds as a part of the larger problem of filth disease and moral corruption that plagued the urban environments and weeds were seen as refuge for tramps and other criminal or undesirable people The St Louis Post Dispatch credited weeds as causing diphtheria scarlet fever and typhoid 18 In St Louis between the years of 1905 1910 weeds became viewed as a major public health hazard believed to cause typhoid and malaria and legal precedents were set in order to control weeds that would help facilitate the adoption of weed control laws throughout the country 18 Ecological significance nbsp A dandelion is a common plant all over the world especially in Europe Asia and the Americas It is considered a weed in some contexts such as lawns but not others such as when it is grown as a vegetable or herbal medicine Weed as a category of plant overlaps with the closely related concepts of ruderal and pioneer species 19 Pioneer species are specifically adapted to disturbed environments where the existing plant and soil community has been disrupted or damaged in some way Adaptation to disturbance can give weeds advantages over desirable crops pastures or ornamental plants The nature of the habitat and its disturbances will affect or even determine which types of weed communities become dominant 20 In weed ecology some authorities speak of the relationship between the three Ps plant place perception These have been very variously defined but the weed traits listed by H G Baker are widely cited 21 22 Examples of such ruderal or pioneer species include plants that are adapted to naturally occurring disturbed environments such as dunes and other windswept areas with shifting soils alluvial flood plains river banks and deltas and areas that are burned repeatedly 23 Since human agricultural and horticultural practices often mimic these natural disturbances that weedy species have adapted for some weeds are effectively preadapted to grow and proliferate in human disturbed areas such as agricultural fields lawns gardens roadsides and construction sites As agricultural practices continue and develop weeds evolve further with humans exerting evolutionary pressure upon weeds through manipulating their habitat and attempting to control weed populations 10 Due to their ability to survive and thrive in conditions challenging or hostile to other plants weeds have been considered extremophiles 24 Adaptability Due to their evolutionary heritage as disturbance adapted pioneers most weeds exhibit incredibly high phenotype plasticity meaning that individual plants hold the potential to adapt their morphology growth and appearance in response to their conditions 19 The potential within a single individual to adapt to a wide variety of conditions is sometimes referred to as an all purpose genotype 25 Disturbance adapted plants typically grow rapidly and reproduce quickly with some annual weeds having multiple generations in a single growing season They commonly have seeds that persist in the soil seed bank for many years Perennial weeds often have underground stems that spread under the soil surface or like ground ivy Glechoma hederacea have creeping stems that root and spread out over the ground 26 These traits make many disturbance adapted plants highly successful as weeds 19 On top of the ability of individual plants to adapt to their conditions weed populations also evolve much more quickly than older models of evolution account for 25 Once established in an agricultural setting weeds have been observed to undergo evolutionary changes to adapt to selective pressures imposed by human management Some examples include changes in seed dormancy changes in seasonal life cycles changes in plant morphology and the evolution of resistance to herbicides 10 Rapid life cycles large populations and ability to spread large numbers of seeds long distances also allow weed species with these general characteristics to evolve quickly 27 Dispersal The concept of weeds also overlaps with the concept of invasive species both in the sense that human activities tend to introduce weeds outside their native range and that an introduced species may be considered a weed Many weed species have moved out of their natural geographic ranges and spread around the world in tandem with human migrations and commerce Weed seeds are often collected and transported with crops after the harvesting of grains so humans are a vector of transport as well as a producer of the disturbed environments to which weed species are well adapted resulting in many weeds having a close association with human activities 28 29 Some plants become dominant when introduced into new environments because the animals and plants in their original environment that compete with them or feed on them are absent in what is sometimes called the natural enemies hypothesis plants freed from these specialist consumers may become dominant An example is Klamath weed which threatened millions of hectares of prime grain and grazing land in North America after it was accidentally introduced The Klamathweed Beetle a species that specializes in consuming the plant was imported during World War II Within several years Klamath weed was reduced to a rare roadside weed 30 31 In locations where predation and mutually competitive relationships are absent weeds have increased resources available for growth and reproduction The weediness of some species that are introduced into new environments may be caused by their production of allelopathic chemicals which indigenous plants are not yet adapted to a scenario sometimes called the novel weapons hypothesis These chemicals may limit the growth of established plants or the germination and growth of seeds and seedlings 32 33 Weed growth can also inhibit the growth of later successional species in ecological succession 34 Introduced species have been observed to undergo rapid evolutionary change to adapt to their new environments with changes in plant height size leaf shape dispersal ability reproductive output vegetative reproduction ability level of dependence on the mycorrhizal network and level of phenotype plasticity appearing on timescales of decades to centuries 35 Invasive species can be more adaptable in their new environments than in their native environments occupying broader ranges in areas where they are invasive than in areas where they are native Hybridization between similar species can produce novel invasive plants that are better adapted to their surroundings Polyploidy is also observed to be strongly selected for among some invasive populations such as Solidago canadensis in China Many weed species are now found almost worldwide with novel adaptations that suit regional populations to their environments 25 Negative impacts nbsp Invasive Canada Goldenrod as a roadside weed in Poland nbsp Australia 1907 Cattlemen survey 700 carcasses of cattle that were killed overnight by a poisonous plant 36 Some negative impacts of weeds are functional they interfere with food and fiber production in agriculture wherein they must be controlled to prevent lost or diminished crop yields In other settings they interfere with other cosmetic decorative or recreational goals such as in lawns landscape architecture playing fields and golf courses In the case of invasive species they can be of concern for environmental reasons when introduced species outcompete native plants and cause broader damage to ecosystem health and functioning 37 Some weed species have been classified as noxious weeds by government authorities because if left unchecked they often compete with native or crop plants or cause harm to livestock 38 They are often foreign species accidentally or imprudently imported into a region where there are few natural controls to limit their population and spread 39 In a range of contexts weeds can have negative impacts by competing with the desired plants for the resources that a plant typically needs namely direct sunlight soil nutrients water and to a lesser extent space for growth providing hosts and vectors for plant pathogens giving them greater opportunity to infect and degrade the quality of the desired plants providing food or shelter for animal pests such as seed eating birds and Tephritid fruit flies that otherwise could hardly survive seasonal shortages 40 offering irritation to the skin or digestive tracts of people or animals either physical irritation via thorns prickles or burs or chemical irritation via natural poisons or irritants in the weed for example the poisons found in Nerium species 41 causing root damage to engineering works such as drains road surfaces and foundations 42 blocking streams and rivulets 43 Positive impactsSee also companion plant beneficial weed List of beneficial weeds and list of edible flowers What would the world be once bereft of wet and wildness Let them be left O let them be left wildness and wet Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet Gerard Manley Hopkins poem Inversnaid While the term weed generally has a negative connotation many plants known as weeds can have beneficial properties A number of weeds such as the dandelion Taraxacum and lamb s quarter are edible and their leaves or roots may be used for food or herbal medicine Burdock is common over much of the world and is sometimes used to make soup and medicine in East Asia 44 Some weeds attract beneficial insects which in turn can protect crops from harmful pests Weeds can also prevent pest insects from finding a crop because their presence disrupts the incidence of positive cues which pests use to locate their food Weeds may also act as a living mulch providing ground cover that reduces moisture loss and prevents erosion Weeds may also improve soil fertility dandelions for example bring up nutrients like calcium and nitrogen from deep in the soil with their tap root and clover hosts nitrogen fixing bacteria in its roots fertilizing the soil directly The dandelion is also one of several species which break up hardpan in overly cultivated fields helping crops grow deeper root systems Some garden flowers originated as weeds in cultivated fields and have been selectively bred for their garden worthy flowers or foliage An example of a crop weed that is grown in gardens is the corncockle Agrostemma githago which was a common weed in European wheat fields but is now sometimes grown as a garden plant 45 Ecological role As pioneer species weeds begin the process of ecological succession after a disturbance event The rapid aggressive growth of weeds rapidly prevents erosion in newly exposed bare soil and has substantially slowed topsoil loss due to anthropogenic disturbances 46 In climate change adaptation It has been suggested that weeds with their aggressive ability to adapt could provide humans with vital tools and knowledge for climate change adaptation Some researchers argue that researching weed species could offer valuable insights for crop breeding or that weeds themselves hold potential as hardy climate change resistant crops Adaptable weeds could also be a source of transgenic genes which could confer useful traits upon crops 19 Weed species have been used in the restoration of land in Australia using a method called natural sequence farming This method allows non native weeds to stabilize and restore degraded areas where native species are not yet capable of regenerating themselves 47 Weeds as adaptable species We ve got to be one of the most bomb proof species on the planet Paleontologist David Jablonsky 11 An alternate definition often used by biologists is any species not just plants that can quickly adapt to any environment 11 Some traits of weedy species are the ability to reproduce quickly disperse widely live in a variety of habitats establish a population in strange places succeed in disturbed ecosystems and resist eradication once established Such species often do well in human dominated environments as other species are not able to adapt Common examples include the common pigeon brown rat and the raccoon Other weedy species have been able to expand their range without actually living in human environments as human activity has damaged the ecosystems of other species These include the coyote the white tailed deer and the brown headed cowbird 11 In response to the idea that humans may face extinction due to environmental degradation paleontologist David Jablonsky counters by arguing that humans are a weed species Like other weedy species humans are widely dispersed in a wide variety of environments and are highly unlikely to go extinct no matter how much damage the environment faces 11 Plants often considered to be weedsThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp White cloverWhite clover is considered by some to be a weed in lawns but in many other situations is a desirable source of fodder honey and soil nitrogen 48 49 A short list of some plants that often are considered to be weeds follows Amaranth pigweed annual with copious long lasting seeds also a highly edible and resilient food source Bermuda grass perennial spreading by runners rhizomes and seeds Bindweed Broadleaf plantain perennial spreads by seeds that persist in the soil for many years Burdock biennial Common lambsquarters annual Cogongrass Imperata cylindrica One of the most damaging pest weeds in the world infesting vast areas in the tropics 50 51 Creeping charlie perennial fast spreading plants with long creeping stems Dandelion perennial wind spread fast growing and drought tolerant Goldenrod perennial Japanese knotweed Kudzu perennial Leafy spurge perennial with underground stems Milk thistle annual or biennial Poison ivy perennial Ragweed annual Sorrel annual or perennial Striga St John s wort perennial Sumac woody perennial Tree of heaven woody perennial Wild carrot biennial Wood sorrel perennial Yellow nutsedge perennialMany invasive weeds were introduced deliberately in the first place and may have not been considered nuisances at the time but rather beneficial Weed control nbsp A field of beets being weeded in Colorado United States in 1972Weed control encompasses a range of methods used by humans to stop reduce or prevent the growth and reproduction of weeds within agricultural or other managed environments Some weed control is preventative implementing protocols to stop weeds from invading new areas Cultural weed control involves shaping the managed environment to make it less favorable for weeds 52 53 Once weeds are present in an area a wide variety of means to destroy the weeds and their seeds can be employed Since weeds are highly adaptable relying on a single method to control weeds soon results in the invasion or adaptation of weeds that are not susceptible Integrated pest management as it applies to weeds refers to a plan of controlling weeds that integrates multiple methods of weed control and prevention 54 Methods of preventative weed control include cleaning equipment stopping existing weeds in nearby areas from producing seed and avoiding seed or manure that could be contaminated with weeds 55 A wide variety of cultural weed control methods are used including cover cropping crop rotation selecting the most competitive cultivars of crops mulching planting with optimal density and intercropping 56 Mechanical methods of weed control involve physically cutting uprooting or otherwise destroying weeds On small farms hand weeding is the dominant means of weed control but as larger farms dominate agriculture this method becomes less feasible 6 On many operations however some hand weeding may be an unavoidable component of weed control 53 Tillage mowing and burning are common examples of mechanical weed control on larger scales New technology increases the range of mechanical weed control options One newly emerging form of mechanical weed control uses electricity to kill weeds 57 Mechanical weed control has been increasingly replaced by the use of herbicides 58 The reliance on herbicides has resulted in the rapid evolution of herbicide resistance in weeds making previously effective herbicide treatments useless for the control of weeds 59 In particular glyphosate which was once considered a revolutionary breakthrough in weed control was relied upon heavily when it was first introduced to agriculture resulting in rapid emergence of resistance 60 As of 2023 58 weed species have developed resistance to glyphosate 61 Herbicide resistance in weeds has rapidly developed into new increasingly challenging forms as the plants continually evolve Non target site resistance or NTSR is particularly difficult to counteract since it may confer resistance to multiple herbicides at once including herbicides the plants ancestors were never exposed to 62 Various methods of adjusting herbicide application to avoid resistance such as rotating herbicides used and tank mixing herbicides have all been questioned in terms of their efficacy for preventing resistance from arising 63 Understanding the habit of weeds is important for non chemical methods of weed control such as plowing surface scuffling promotion of more beneficial cover crops and prevention of seed accumulation in fields For example amaranth is an edible plant that is considered a weed by mainstream modern agriculture It produces copious seeds up to 1 million per plant that last many years and is an early emergent fast grower Those seeking to control amaranth quote the mantra This year s seeds become next year s weeds 64 However another view of amaranth values the plant as a resilient food source 65 Some people have appreciated weeds for their tenacity their wildness and even the work and connection to nature they provide As Christopher Lloyd wrote in The Well Tempered Garden Many gardeners will agree that hand weeding is not the terrible drudgery that it is often made out to be Some people find in it a kind of soothing monotony It leaves their minds free to develop the plot for their next novel or to perfect the brilliant repartee with which they should have encountered a relative s latest example of unreasonableness 66 Under climate change As anthropogenic climate change increases temperatures and atmospheric carbon dioxide many weeds are expected to become harder to control and to expand their ranges at the expense of less weedy species For example kudzu the infamous invasive vine found throughout the Southeastern United States is expected to spread northward due to climate change Increased competitive strength of agricultural weeds in future climate conditions threaten future ability to grow crops Existing weed management practices will likely fail under future changes in climate conditions meaning new agricultural techniques will be needed for global food security Suggested techniques are holistic transitioning away from reliance on herbicide and include aggressive adaptation of agroforestry and use of allelopathic crop residues to suppress weeds 67 See alsoCrop weeds Introduced species Invasive species List of beneficial weeds Pest organism Superweeds Vavilovian mimicry Vermin Volunteer botany Weed of cultivation WildflowerReferences a b Bridges David C 1994 Impact of Weeds on Human Endeavors Weed Technology 8 2 392 395 doi 10 1017 S0890037X00038987 JSTOR 3988124 S2CID 90116503 a b Harlan J R amp deWet J M 1965 Some thoughts about weeds Economic botany 19 1 16 24 Define the term weed forages oregonstate edu Oregon State University Forage Information System June 2009 a b What is a Weed Snohomish County Extension Office Holzner W amp Numata M Eds 2013 Biology and ecology of weeds Vol 2 Springer Science amp Business Media page needed a b Chauhan BS 2020 Grand Challenges in Weed Management Front Agron 1 3 doi 10 3389 fagro 2019 00003 Nakano Michelle 13 February 2020 21 Characteristics of weedy species Red Seal Landscape Horticulturist Identify Plants and Plant Requirements Kwantlen Polytechnic University a b Janick Jules 1979 Horticultural Science 3rd ed San Francisco W H Freeman p 308 ISBN 0 7167 1031 5 Stromberg Juliet C 2023 Bringing Home the Wild A Riparian Garden in a Southwest City Tucson University of Arizona Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 8165 5028 9 a b c Guglielmini A C Ghersa C M Satorre Emilio Horacio 2007 Co evolution of domesticated crops and associated weeds Ecologia Austral 17 1 a b c d e David Quammen October 1998 Planet of Weeds PDF Harper s Magazine retrieved November 15 2012 Blackshaw R E Anderson R L amp Lemerle D E I R D R E 2007 Cultural weed management Non Chemical Weed Management Principles Concepts and Technology Wallingford UK CAB International 35 48 Ainit Snir et al 22 July 2015 The Origin of Cultivation and Proto Weeds Long Before Neolithic Farming PLOS ONE 10 7 e0131422 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1031422S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0131422 PMC 4511808 PMID 26200895 Genesis 3 17 19 New International Version Timmons F L 2005 A History of Weed Control in the United States and Canada Weed Science 53 6 748 761 doi 10 1614 0043 1745 2005 053 0748 AHOWCI 2 0 CO 2 JSTOR 4046973 S2CID 86059980 a b c Clayton Neil 2003 Weeds People and Contested Places PDF Environment and History 9 3 304 306 308 309 doi 10 3197 096734003129342863 JSTOR 20723295 Pooler C harles Knox ed 1918 The Works of Shakespeare Sonnets The Arden Shakespeare 1st series London Methuen amp Company OCLC 4770201 a b c d Falck Zachary J S 2002 Controlling the Weed Nuisance in Turn of the Century American Cities Environmental History 7 4 613 616 621 doi 10 2307 3986059 JSTOR 3986059 a b c d Clements David R Jones Vanessa L 2021 Ten Ways That Weed Evolution Defies Human Management Efforts Amidst a Changing Climate Agronomy 11 2 284 doi 10 3390 agronomy11020284 Bell Graham 2005 The Permaculture Garden Chelsea Green Publishing pp 63 64 ISBN 9781856230278 Baker Herbert G November 1974 The Evolution of Weeds Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 5 1 1 24 doi 10 1146 annurev es 05 110174 000245 ISSN 0066 4162 Baker H G Characteristics and modes of origin of weeds In The Genetics of Colonizing Species H G Baker G L Stebbins eds New York Academic Press 1965 pp 147 172 Hans Lambers F Stuart Chapin III Thijs L Pons 8 October 2008 Plant Physiological Ecology Springer pp 507 ISBN 978 0 387 78341 3 Sharma Gourav Barney Jacob N Westwood James H Haak David C 2021 Into the weeds new insights in plant stress Trends in Plant Science 26 10 1050 1060 doi 10 1016 j tplants 2021 06 003 PMID 34238685 a b c Clements David R Jones Vanessa 2021 Rapid Evolution of Invasive Weeds Under Climate Change Present Evidence and Future Research Needs Frontiers in Agronomy 3 doi 10 3389 fagro 2021 664034 Saupe Stephen G Plant Foraging Two Case Studies PDF Retrieved February 15 2009 Ziska Lewis H Blumenthal Dana M Franks Steven J 2019 Understanding the nexus of rising CO2 climate change and evolution in weed biology Invasive Plant Science and Management 12 2 79 88 doi 10 1017 inp 2019 12 S2CID 199632010 Rashid M Hassan Robert Scholes Neville Ash 14 December 2005 Ecosystems and Human Well Being Current State and Trends Findings of the Condition and Trends Working Group Island Press pp 570 ISBN 978 1 55963 228 7 National Geographic 2011 National Geographic Answer Book 10 001 Fast Facts about Our World National Geographic Society pp 175 ISBN 978 1 4262 0892 8 Biological Control of Klamath Weed lt Hypericum perforatum faculty ucr edu Chrysolina quadrigemina biocontrol entomology cornell edu College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Retrieved 25 July 2023 Willis Rick J 2007 The History of Allelopathy Springer p 8 ISBN 978 1 4020 4092 4 Retrieved 2009 08 17 Callaway qxd PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2006 Retrieved 2010 03 20 Van der Putten W H Mortimer S R Hedlund K Van Dijk C Brown V K Lepa J Rodriguez Barrueco C Roy J Diaz Len T A Gormsen D Korthals G W Lavorel S Regina I Santa Smilauer P 2000 07 01 Plant species diversity as a driver of early succession in abandoned fields a multi site approach Oecologia 124 1 91 99 Bibcode 2000Oecol 124 91V doi 10 1007 s004420050028 ISSN 1432 1939 PMID 28308417 S2CID 38703575 Buswell Joanna Moles Angela Hartley Stephen 2010 Is rapid evolution common in introduced plant species Journal of Ecology 99 1 Coupe Sheena ed 1989 Frontier country Australia s outback heritage Vol 1 Willougby Weldon Russell p 298 Muhammad Ashraf Munir Ozturk Muhammad Sajid Aqeel Ahmad Ahmet Aksoy 2 June 2012 Crop Production for Agricultural Improvement Springer pp 525 ISBN 978 94 007 4116 4 United States Bureau of Land Management Oregon State Office 1985 Northwest area noxious weed control program environmental impact statement final U S Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Oregon State Office pp 2 House U S Office of the Law Revision 25 April 2008 United States Code 2006 V 3 Title 7 Sections 701 End Government Printing Office pp 1230 ISBN 978 0 16 079998 3 Annecke D R Moran V C 1982 Insects and mites of cultivated plants in South Africa London Butterworths ISBN 0 409 08398 4 Watt John Mitchell Breyer Brandwijk Maria Gerdina 1962 The Medicinal and Poisonous Plants of Southern and Eastern Africa 2nd ed E amp S Livingstone Roberts John Jackson Nick Smith Mark 2006 Tree Roots in the Built Environment The Stationery Office ISBN 978 0117536203 Black Willow Weeds Australia Archived from the original on 2015 07 11 Burdock Root Chinese Soup Pot Retrieved 29 May 2015 Preston Pearman amp Dines 2002 New Atlas of the British Flora Oxford University Press Schonbeck Mark An Ecological Understanding of Weeds eOrganic Kenyon Georgina How weeds help fight climate change bbc com BBC Future Voisin Andre 1988 Grass Productivity Island Press ISBN 978 0933280649 Woodfield Derek R White clover New Zealand s competitive edge Symposium NZ Agronomy Society and Grassland Association at Lincoln University New Zealand November 1995 Nations Food and Agriculture Organization of the United 1982 Agrochemicals Fate in Food and the Environment Proceedings of an International Symposium on Agrochemicals Fate in Food and the Environment Using Isotope Techniques International Atomic Energy Agency ISBN 978 92 0 010382 7 Weed Risk Assessment for Imperata cylindrica L P Beauv Poaceae Cogongrass PDF Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service U S Department of Agriculture Describe the five general categories of weed control methods forages oregonstate edu Oregon State University June 2009 a b General Methods of Weed Management ipm ucanr edu University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources Pittman Kara Flessner Michael Rubione Claudio Ackroyd Victoria Mirsky Steven What Is Integrated Weed Management growiwm org Weed prevention Alberta ca Mohler Charles L Teasdale John R DiTommaso Antonio Ch 3 Cultural Weed Management sare org Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Claver Hugo 12 September 2022 Electric weeding with high frequency electricity gives better weed control with lower energy use futurefarming com Gianessi Leonard P 2013 The increasing importance of herbicides in worldwide crop production Pest Manag Sci 69 10 1099 1105 doi 10 1002 ps 3598 PMID 23794176 Forouzesh Abed Zand Eskandar Soufizadeh Saeid Samadi Foroushani Sadegh 2015 Classification of herbicides according to chemical family for weed resistance management strategies an update Weed Research 55 4 334 358 doi 10 1111 wre 12153 Service R F 2013 What Happens when Weed Killers Stop Killing Science 341 6152 1329 doi 10 1126 science 341 6152 1329 PMID 24052282 Number of Resistant Species to Individual Active Herbicides weedscience org Brown H Claire 18 August 2021 Attack of the Superweeds The New York Times Quinn Lauren Tank mixing herbicides may not be enough to avoid herbicide resistance farmers advance com The Biology and Ecology of Palmer Amaranth Implications for Control UGA extension Retrieved 29 May 2015 Rethinking a Weed the Truth about Amaranth Our World United Nations University Christopher Lloyd The Well Tempered Garden 1973 Anwar Parvez Islam A K M Mominul Yeasmin Sabina Rashid Harun Juraimi Abdul Shukor Ahmed Sharif Shrestha Anil 2021 Weeds and Their Responses to Management Efforts in A Changing Climate Agronomy 11 10 1921 doi 10 3390 agronomy11101921 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Weeds plants IUCN Invasive Species Specialist Group New Mexico State University Weeds Page includes identification tool New Mexico State University Department of Entomology Plant Pathology and Weed Science Global Invasive Species Database Archived 2010 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Volunteer Plant definition Archived 2020 08 10 at the Wayback Machine Lucid Multi access key to invasive terrestrial plants in Europe 140 species 41 characters Lucid multi access key Weeds of Australia Identification Tool Queensland Government 1021 species 55 characters Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Weed amp oldid 1195846554, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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