A Brief History of the
European Weed Research Society
WYBO VAN DER ZWEEP Secretary, EWRC 1960-75, Scientific
Secretary, EWRS 1975 - 1980
and RAY HANCE Scientific Secretary, EWRS 1982-1993.
The Precursor, the
European Weed Research Council (EWRC)
Origins
In May 1958 a meeting of weed scientists in Ghent set up an international
working group to accelerate progress in solving the problems caused by
weeds. The first outcome was to a conference at Stuttgart-Hohenheim where
Project Groups on bracken, wild oats and methods of herbicide evaluation
were organised and the EWRC was established at a second meeting at Oxford in
1960. Each country was allowed to nominate an official representative on the
Council and by 1975 there were 24 of them plus co-opted members from Israel
and the Lebanon. In addition there was an advisory panel of 4 scientists
from agrochemical manufacturers to reflect the increasing importance of
herbicides. Close interaction with industry has continued and the Presidency
of EWRS alternates between industrial and non-industrial members. The 1960
meeting also decided to start the journal Weed Research. This was made
possible by the generosity of a number of organisations and companies who
contributed to a Guarantee Fund to cover the financial risk.
Activities
Council meetings were held annually in different countries and were
followed by excursions to research institutes and farms. They provided
important opportunities for scientists from around Europe to exchange views,
information and experience.
Symposia were perhaps the most important means of bringing people together.
Four major symposia, primarily on herbicides, were held in France in
collaboration with COLUMA (Comité de Lutte contre les Mauvaises Herbes) and
there were also 4 on aquatic weeds, 2 on Mediterranean weed problems and one
on parasitic weeds.
Research Groups were established to exchange information and
undertake collaborative projects on:- annual grass weeds; aquatic weeds;
bracken (Pteridium aquilinum); weed problems of mountain areas (with FAO);
Equisetum spp; parasitic and hemiparasitic weeds.
Co-operation with other organisations was extensive. There was
co-operation with the British Weed Control Council as well as with COLUMA
and FAO and conferences were held jointly with the International Sugarbeet
Research Institute and the International Union of Biological Control (on
parasitic weeds). There was collaborative research with the International
Society of Horticultural Science and a joint committee of the Herbicide
Evaluation Project Group and EPPO (European Mediterranean Plant Protection
Organization) was formed.
Publications were seen as essential to stimulating weed control
research. All symposia produced Proceedings and Weed Research rapidly became
established as an international journal. By accepting papers in English,
French or German it was accessible to virtually all European scientists and
it has increasingly attracted contributions from all over the world.
Education and Training was encouraged through an
Education Committee.
The transition from EWRC to EWRS
As the activities of EWRC extended it became apparent that a society with
membership open to all individuals and organisations who wished to
participate would be more effective. A steering committee began work to
develop plans for the new society in December 1973.
The European Weed
Research Society
Formalities
The new society formally came into existence and held its first General
Assembly on 3 December 1975 during the Symposium in Paris organised jointly
with COLUMA on the Status, Biology and Control of Grassweeds. The legal seat
of the Society was in the Netherlands but the Secretariat was initially
based in the UK after which it spent periods in France, Germany and now is
spread over three countries. The object of the Society, as described in the
first Constitution, is to promote and encourage weed research and control
technology in Europe for the benefit of the community as a whole.
The Constitution remained unchanged for 10 years. The
Governing Body was the Council composed of nominated national delegates,
elected members, officers of the Society and co-opted members. As over 40
members were involved, this arrangement proved to be unwieldy, so when the
Constitution was revised in 1984-86 the Council was disbanded and the
Executive Committee (EXCOM) was given total responsibility for the Society's
affairs. National representatives were retained but were elected and were
given different responsibilities.
The Scientific Programme
The Scientific Committee (SCICOM) is responsible for the scientific
programme of the Society. Of the 7 Research Groups inherited from EWRC, only
the Annual Grassweeds Group was really concerned with arable agriculture so
an initial task of the SCICOM was to stimulate the development of others. By
the end of 1981 there were Groups for Herbicide Application, Herbicides in
the Soil, Laboratory Biotests, Mediterranean Weeds and Environmental Effects
on Herbicide Performance in addition to 5 of the 7 EWRC groups. Also Joint
Committees were established with the European Association for Potato
Research (EAPR) for the control of volunteer potatoes and with EPPO
regarding the evaluation and registration of herbicides. The Education
Committee, initially a Standing Committee reporting directly to EXCOM. was
reconstituted as a Working Group of SCICOM.
Working Groups and Symposia. The early activities
of Working Groups included workshops, ring-testing, collaborative
experiments, surveys and method evaluation. The Herbicide - Soil and
Education Working Groups produced books with commercial publishers which
generated income for the Society. The Aquatic Weeds Group followed the 4
EWRC symposia with others in Amsterdam in 1978 and Novi Sad in 1982.
Similarly the Mediterranean Weeds Working Group followed the 1966 and 1971
EWRC Symposia with one in Oeiras in 1984. There were also more general
Symposia on Different Methods of Weed Control and Their Integration at
Uppsala in 1977 and The Influence of Different Factors on the Development
and Control of Weeds in Mainz in 1979. Symposia organised together with
other bodies included the quadrennial Weed Biology, Ecology and Systematics
with COLUMA and Influence of Environmental Factors on Herbicide Performance
and Crop and Weed Biology with the Association of Applied Biologists and the
Society of Chemical Industry at Oxford in 1983.
SCICOM Evolves. In 1985 not only was the
Constitution amended but the operation of SCICOM was revised. Weed research
was divided into logically connected parts termed Main Subject Areas (MSAs)
which included the existing and new Working Groups. EXCOM appointed a
chairman for each MSA who became a member of SCICOM. Symposia were to be
based on one or more MSAs.
The following decade saw a substantial increase in
activities so only a few can be mentioned here. Modelling approaches became
widespread and stimulated a cross MSA Workshop on models in Weed Science
held in Wageningen in 1987. The Weed Control in Maize MSA introduced the
'Weed Tour'as an activity, in Austria in 1987, Bavaria in 1988 and Hungary
in 1996. The Education and Training Group held its first training course in
Zaragoza in 1990 organised in conjunction with CIHEAM. In 1994 the European
Union funded a proposal on biological weed control which included many
members of the Biological Control MSA, the first time a EWRS activity has
attracted EU funding.
In addition to meetings organised within MSAs, there were
Symposia in Stuttgat-Hohenheim in 1986 (Economic Weed Control), Wageningen
in 1988 (Factors Affecting Herbicidal Activity and Selectivity), Helsinki,
1990 (Integrated Weed Management in Cereals), Braunschweig, 1993
(Quantitative approaches in Weed and Herbicide Research), Budapest, 1995
(Challenges in Weed Science in a Changing Europe), Poznan 1997, Basel 1999
and the Society organised jointly with IWSS, the 2nd International Weed
Control Congress in Copenhagen in 1996.
Response to political change
The Budapest and Poznan Symposia showed the Society's increasing concern
with eastern Europe and there have also been training programmes in Romania
(1994), Belarus (1995) and Russia (1997). As a result of a policy to
facilitate recruitment, over 35% of the membership now live in former
COMECON countries.
This concern was one of the factors that forced further
evolution of the Society's scientific activities. The policy of
concentrating on specialist symposia was changed as the need to support
eastern European activities requires more general conferences. By the end of
1996 the size of SCICOM was reduced by consolidating MSAs, now renamed
Working Groups, to 7. Minor changes made to the Constitution in 1999
included the adoption of the Euro as the formal currency.
Communication, liaison and dissemination of information
Weed Research was a well established journal of EWRC and it has continued to
be vital to the Society both for scientific communication and as a source of
income. Since 1994 it has been produced in English only. The Newsletter was
initially almost literally a letter but it expanded following the changes in
the Constitution and SCICOM in 1985-6. It now reports planned and completed
activities of Working Groups and includes abstracts from workshops and other
meetings. National representatives provide occasional reports for the
Newsletter and some include summaries of theses. Recent issues plus other
Society information and job vacancies are available on the Society's
website, http://www.ewrs.org/.
Epilogue
This note would be incomplete without acknowledging the huge voluntary
effort of weed scientists throughout Europe in promoting and developing EWRC
and EWRS. We hope this brief account will make those who have been most
actively involved feel that their efforts have been worthwhile.