Beneficial weed

Clover was once included in grass seed mixes, because it is a legume that fertilizes the soil

A beneficial weed is any of various plants not generally considered domesticated, but which nonetheless has some companion plant effect, or else is edible or somehow beneficial. Beneficial weeds include a great many wildflowers, as well as other weeds that are commonly removed or poisoned.

Soil health

Dandelions benefit neighboring plant health by bringing up nutrients and moisture with its deep tap root

Although erroneously assumed to compete with neighboring plants for food and moisture, some "weeds" provide the soil with nutrients, either directly or indirectly.

Pest prevention

Crow garlic, like any allium, masks scents from pest insects, protecting neighboring plants

Many weeds protect nearby plants from insect pests.

One way they can do this is to repel insects and other pests through their smell , as do alliums and wormwood. Another is to entirely mask a companion's scent, or the pheromones of pest insects, as with ground ivy and wild oregano.

Some also are unpleasant to small animals, because of their spines or other features, keeping them away from an area to be protected.

Trap crops

Some weeds act as trap crops, distracting pests away from valued plants. Insects seeking a food plant search by smell, and then land at random on anything green in the area of the scent. If they land on an edible "weed", they will stay there instead of going on to the intended victim. Sometimes, they actively prefer the trap crop.

Host-finding disruption

Recent studies on host-plant finding have shown that flying pests are far less successful if their host-plants are surrounded by any other plant or even "decoy-plants" made of green plastic, cardboard, or any other green material.

One scientific study said that simply having clover growing nearby cut the odds of cabbage root flies hitting the right plant from 36% to 7%.[1] Statistically, this is enough to dramatically change the productivity of one's crop, all alone.

Companion plants

Queen Anne's Lace provides shelter to nearby plants, as well as attracting predatory insects that eat pests like caterpillars, and appears to boost the productivity of tomato plants

Many plants can grow intercropped in the same space, because they exist on different levels in the same area, providing ground cover or working as a trellis for each other.[2] This healthier style of horticulture is called forest gardening.

Among the obvious benefits are providing a wind break or shelter from noonday sun for more delicate plants.

Green mulch

Conversely, some intercropped provide living mulch effect, used by inhibiting the growth of any weeds that are actually harmful, and creating a humid, cooler microclimate around nearby plants, stabilizing soil moisture more than they consume it for themselves.

Plants such as ryegrass, red clover, and white clover are examples of "weeds" that are living mulches, often welcomed in horticulture.

Herbicide

Repel plants or fungi, through a chemical means known as allelopathy.[3] Specific other plants can be bothered by a chemical emission through their roots or air, slowing their growth, preventing seed germination, or even killing them.

Beneficial insects

A common companion plant benefit from many weeds is to attract, or be inhabited by, beneficial insects or other organisms which benefit plants.

For example, wild umbellifers attract predatory wasps and flies, that eat nectar, but reproduce by feeding common garden pests to their offspring .

Likewise, some weeds attract ladybugs or the "good" types of nematode, or provide ground cover for predatory beetles.

Human-useful

Flavor

Some plants seem to subtly change the flavor of other plants around them, in a way humans find desirable, for example stinging nettle, besides being edible if properly cooked, seems to increase essential oil production in nearby herbs.[4]

Examples

Further information: List of beneficial weeds

Footnotes

  1. Horticulture Research International, Wellesbourne : “Insects can see clearly now the weeds have gone.” Finch, S. & Collier, R. H. (2003). Biologist, 50 (3), 132-135.
  2. Ussery, Harvey. "Plant an Edible Forest Garden". Motherearthnews.com. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  3. "Journal of Chemical Ecology , Volume 9, Number 8". SpringerLink. Retrieved 2012-06-13.
  4. Burnett, Bruce. "Stinging Nettle: Companion Plant and Medicinal Herb". BCliving. Retrieved July 21, 2013.
  5. Anon. "Companion Planting for Vegetables & Plants". Country living and farm lifestyles. countryfarm-lifestyles.com. Retrieved 2011-03-07.
  6. "Scribd". Scribd. Retrieved 2012-06-13.

References

External links

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