Step 1: Understand glyphosate.
Glyphosate is a widely used systemic herbicide. It inhibits the enzyme EPSP synthase (5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase), blocking the shikimic acid pathway essential for amino acid synthesis in plants.
Step 2: Classify it by stage and selectivity.
- Stage: Glyphosate is applied after the emergence of weeds, i.e., it is a post-emergence herbicide.
- Selectivity: Glyphosate kills a wide range of plants (grasses, broadleaf weeds, shrubs, even trees), meaning it is non-selective.
Step 3: Eliminate incorrect options.
- (1) Post-emergence selective herbicide → Wrong, it is not selective.
- (2) Post-emergence non-selective herbicide → Correct.
- (3) Pre-emergence selective herbicide → Wrong, glyphosate is not pre-emergence.
- (4) Pre-emergence non-selective herbicide → Wrong, it is not pre-emergence.
Step 4: Conclusion.
Hence, glyphosate is a post-emergence non-selective herbicide.
Final Answer: \[ \boxed{\text{Glyphosate is a post-emergence non-selective herbicide.}} \]
List-I (Method of weed control) | List-II (Measure of weed control) |
(A) Preventive method of weed control | (I) Proper crop rotation |
(B) Cultural method of weed control | (II) Control of Lantana camara (Prickly Pear) by Lantana bugs |
(C) Chemical weed control | (III) Use of herbicide |
(D) Biological weed control | (IV) Use of weed-free seeds |