FREMONT, CA: Agrochemicals are agricultural chemicals that include fertilizers, plant protection chemicals or insecticides, and plant growth hormones. It is a material required for the operation of an agricultural ecosystem. Herbicides, pesticides, liming and acidifying agents (which affect pH), soil conditioners, fungicides, and livestock-procurement chemicals such as antibiotics and hormones are examples of agrochemicals.
The usage of agrochemicals has become a top priority for crop production. As a result, agrochemicals play an essential role in modern husbandry. Because of intensive agricultural operations on large farms, the issue of keeping crops damage-free has become a top focus. Agrochemicals were introduced to help crops resist pests and enhance harvests. Pesticides and composts are the best-known agrochemicals.
Advantages of agrochemicals
Agrochemicals allow farmers to produce more crops per acre of land over a longer period of time. They protect crops from pests, diseases, and weeds, guaranteeing a successful harvest. It also offers environmental benefits because it requires less land to generate large harvests, which reduces the rate of deforestation. The sterility of land is also preserved.
Types of agrochemicals
Crop protector: It primarily consists of pesticides. These are the chemicals that farmers use to keep pests away from crops. In general, a pesticide can be a chemical or biological product, such as a fatal illness, bacterium, antibiotic, or disinfectant, that deters, incapacitates, or kills insects. Pesticide use is consequently treated as a substitute for plant protection. Pesticides are classified into several sorts, including herbicides (chemicals that kill weeds), insecticides (chemicals that kill insects), rodenticides (chemicals that kill rodents), and fungicides.
Plant supplements: Plant supplements are naturally occurring substances that are high in micro and macro nutrients needed by plants. They are used to improve plant growth, fruit ripening, and disease resistance. They may include nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, magnesium, calcium, and sulfur. They promote the formation of new cells, which eventually organise into plant tissues. Growth and survival would be impossible if these nutrients were deficient.