AbstractHigher plants offer an excellent source of biologically active natural products. Over the centuries numerous plants have been exploited as sources of insecticides, but nowadays traditional botanical insecticides play only a minor role in world agriculture. Nevertheless, plant natural products still have enormous potential to inspire and influence modern agrochemical research.Few plant natural products will ever reach the market as productsper se, but others will provide lead structures for programmes of synthetic chemistry and hopefully follow the success story of the synthetic pyrethroids. Structurally complex compounds, which are not amenable to synthetic chemistry programmes, may also have a role to play by validating new modes of action for pesticides.Examples are presented of compounds exhibiting insecticidal, fungicidal and herbicidal effects. Consideration is also given to the development of screening programmes to detect new compounds with interesting biological properties. Careful experimental design and thorough recording of procedures and data are crucial to success. Badly designed programmes afford only weakly active compounds or show effects which cannot be reproduced at a later date.Natural product chemistry, whether based on higher plants, micro‐organisms or other sources, is a very difficult science, but there is little doubt that dedicated research will eventually be rewarded with exciting new lead structures for industrial applicatio
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