Abstract:
Parasitic plants, through a range of infestation strategies, can attack
crop plants and thereby require management. Because such problems
often occur in resource-poor farming systems, companion cropping
to manage parasitic plants is an appropriate approach. Many examples
of companion cropping for this purpose have been reported, but the
use of cattle forage legumes in the genus Desmodium as intercrops has
been shown to be particularly successful in controlling the parasitic
witchweeds (Striga spp.) that afflict approximately one quarter of subSaharan
African cereal production. Through the use of this example,
the development of effective companion crops is described, together
with developments toward widespread adoption and understanding the
underlying mechanisms, both for sustainability and ensuring food security,
and also for exploitation beyond the cropping systems described
here.