Weed seedbank response to crop rotation and tillage in semiarid agroecosystems
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- weed biology-and-ecology
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Weed Science
- Vol. 47 (1) , 67-73
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0043174500090676
Abstract
In a semiarid Mediterranean site in central Spain, field experiments were conducted on a Calcic Haploxeralf (noncalcic brown soil), which had been managed with three crop rotations and two tillage systems (no-tillage and conventional tillage) since 1987. The crop rotations consisted of barley→vetch, barley→sunflower, and a barley monoculture. The study took place in two growing seasons (1992–1994) to assess the effects of management practices on the weed seedbank. During this period, spring weed control was not carried out in winter crops. In the no-tillage system, there was a significant increase in the number of seeds of different weed species: anacyclus, common purslane, corn poppy, knotted hedge-parsley, mouse-ear cress, spring whitlowgrass, tumble pigweed, venus-comb, and Veronica triphyllos. Conversely, the presence of prostrate knotweed and wild radish was highest in plots under conventional tillage. These results suggest large differences in the weed seedbank as a consequence of different soil conditions among tillage systems, but also the necessity of spring weed control when a no-tillage system is used. With regard to crop rotations, the number of seeds of knotted hedge-parsley, mouse-ear cress, and spring whitlowgrass was greater in the plots under the barley→vetch rotation. Common lambsquarters dominated in the plots under the barley→sunflower rotation, whereas venus-comb was the most frequent weed in the barley monoculture. Larger and more diverse weed populations developed in the barley→vetch rotation rather than in the barley→sunflower rotation or the barley monoculture.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Tillage and Mulch on Weed Seed Production and Seed Banks in Sweet CornJournal of Applied Ecology, 1995
- Alien taxa in the North American shrub-steppe four decades after cessation of livestock grazing and cultivation agricultureBiological Conservation, 1994
- Crop Rotation and Intercropping Strategies for Weed ManagementEcological Applications, 1993
- Effect of crop rotation, tillage practice, and herbicides on the population dynamics of wild oats in wheatAustralian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1993
- Weed problems of the next decade in BritainCrop Protection, 1986
- Changes in the Weed Flora of an Arable Field Cultivated for 20 YearsJournal of Applied Ecology, 1985
- Conservation tillage systems and their adoption in the United StatesSoil and Tillage Research, 1985
- The Effects of Seed Burial and Soil Disturbance on Emergence and Survival of Arable Weeds in Relation to Minimal CultivationJournal of Applied Ecology, 1984
- THE BIOLOGY OF CANADIAN WEEDS.: 44. Amaranthus retroflexus L., A. powellii S. Wats. and A. hybridus L.Canadian Journal of Plant Science, 1980
- A decimal code for the growth stages of cerealsWeed Research, 1974