Long-Term Tillage Effects on Seed Banks in Three Ohio Soils
- 12 June 1991
- journal article
- weed biology-and-ecology
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Weed Science
- Vol. 39 (2) , 186-194
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0043174500071459
Abstract
Soils from long-term tillage plots at three locations in Ohio were sampled to determine composition and size of weed seed banks following 25 yr of continuous no-tillage, minimum-tillage, or conventional-tillage corn production. The same herbicide was applied across tillage treatments within each year and an untreated permanent grass sod was sampled for comparison. Seed numbers to a 15-cm depth were highest in the no-tillage treatment in the Crosby silt loam (77 800 m–2) and Wooster silt loam (8400 m–2) soils and in the grass sod (7400 m–2) in a Hoytville silty clay loam soil. Lowest seed numbers were found in conventional-tillage plots in the Wooster soil (400 m–2) and in minimum-tillage plots in the Crosby (2200 m–2) and Hoytville (400 m–2) soils. Concentration of seeds decreased with depth but the effect of tillage on seed depth was not consistent among soil types. Number of weed species was highest in permanent grass sod (10 to 18) and decreased as soil disturbance increased; weed populations were lowest in conventional tillage in the Hoytville soil. Common lambsquarters, pigweeds, and fall panicum were the most commonly found seeds in all soils. Diversity indices indicated that increased soil disturbance resulted in a decrease in species diversity. Weed populations the summer following soil sampling included common lambsquarters, pigweeds, fall panicum, and several species not detected in the seed bank.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- A model of the effects of cultivation on the vertical distribution of weed seeds within the soilWeed Research, 1990
- Soil and foliage arthropod communities in conventional, reduced and no-tillage corn (maize, Zea mays L.) systems: A comparison after 20 years of continuous croppingSoil and Tillage Research, 1988
- Continuous Tillage and Rotation Combinations Effects on Corn, Soybean, and Oat Yields1Agronomy Journal, 1985
- Influence of Long‐Term Tillage and Crop Rotation Combinations on Soil Enzyme ActivitiesSoil Science Society of America Journal, 1984
- Organic Carbon, Nitrogen, and Phosphorus Concentrations and pH in Soil Profiles as Affected by Tillage IntensitySoil Science Society of America Journal, 1983
- Changes in the Soil Seed Bank of Four Long-Term Crop/Herbicide ExperimentsJournal of Applied Ecology, 1981
- Etude de la dynamique d'une communaute adventice: I — Evolution de la flore adventice au cours du cycle vegetatif d'une cultureWeed Research, 1980
- Quantitative relationships between the weed flora after cultivation and the seed population in the soilWeed Research, 1979
- Illustrated Taxonomy Manual of Weed SeedsTaxon, 1972
- Studies on the Weeds of Vegetable Crops. V. Final Observations on an Experiment with Different Primary CultivationsJournal of Applied Ecology, 1965