“…It may often to be useful to build complementary models that focus on specific aims, and link these models as appropriate, rather than trying to put all the biological details into one 'supermodel' (Renton, 2011b;Holzworth et al, 2014;Lawes and Renton, 2015). Adoption is a major challenge for weed management, and models can play a role in facilitating uptake of new practices and technologies, but only if they are welldesigned and well-used as part of a participatory and transdisciplinary approach (Kragt and Llewellyn, 2014;Powles, 2015, 2016;Jordan et al, 2016;Liebman et al, 2016). Furthermore, the usefulness of models depend on the breadth, depth, quality, precision and accuracy of the data used to calibrate them, and, if process-based, on the degree of understanding of the underlying mechanisms (Haefner, 2005).…”