Weed species diversity in spring barley varies with crop rotation and tillage, but not with nutrient source

被引:59
|
作者
Stevenson, FC
Legere, A
Simard, RR
Angers, DA
Pageau, D
Lafond, J
机构
[1] Agr Canada, Res Ctr, Saskatoon, SK S7N 0X2, Canada
[2] Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Soil Sci, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A8, Canada
[3] Agr Canada, Res Ctr, Ste Foy, PQ G1V 2J3, Canada
[4] Agr Canada, Res Ctr, Normandin, PQ G8M 4K3, Canada
关键词
common chickweed; Stellaria media (L.) Vill; red clover; Trifolium pratense L. 'Prosper'; spring barley Hordeum vulgare L. 'Chapais'; timothy; Phleum pratense L. 'Champ'; weed species diversity; crop management practices; species richness; species evenness; Shannon's H'; Shannon's E; Margalef's D-MG; STEME; TRFPR; HORVX; PHLPR;
D O I
10.1017/S0043174500088998
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
The development of sustainable farming systems depends on our ability to predict and manage the response of weed communities to changes in cropping practices. A study was established at Normandin, Quebec, Canada, to investigate the influence of liquid dairy manure and mineral fertilizer, as well as chisel and moldboard plow tillage systems, in a spring barley monoculture and a 3-yr spring barley-forage rotation that included red clover and timothy. Weed species richness (Margalef's D-MG), evenness (Shannon's E), and diversity (Shannon's H') were examined in these treatments from 1992 to 1995. Nutrient source had no effect on any of the three diversity indices. Evenness values were extremely low in all years, suggesting dominance of a few weed species in most treatments. Weed species richness and diversity generally were greater in the barley-forage rotation compared with the monoculture. Tillage effects on richness and diversity varied with crop rotation. Margalef's D-MG and Shannon's H' were greater in 1993 and 1995, but they were lower in 1994 when chisel was compared with moldboard plowing in the monoculture. In 1994, chickweed density was about five times greater in the chisel-plowed monoculture compared with other treatment combinations of rotation and tillage. In 1995, only one species with a density of six plants m(-2) occurred in the moldboard-plowed monoculture compared with three to six species and densities of 51 to 832 plants m(-2) in the other rotation by tillage treatments. Climatic conditions and herbicide use patterns in the different: crop rotation treatments may have contributed to the more dynamic nature of weed species diversity in the barley monoculture. Reduced frequency of tillage and herbicide application; management of the forage stands, especially with regard to their termination; and improved soil resource availability likely explained the increased but more stable diversity of the weed communities in the barley-forage rotation.
引用
收藏
页码:798 / 806
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Response of spring barley to crop rotation, conservation tillage, and weed management in intensity
    Legere, A
    Samson, N
    Rioux, R
    Angers, DA
    Simard, RR
    AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 1997, 89 (04) : 628 - 638
  • [2] Relative influence of crop rotation, tillage, and weed management on weed associations in spring barley cropping systems
    Légère, A
    Samson, N
    WEED SCIENCE, 1999, 47 (01) : 112 - 122
  • [3] Promotion of weed species diversity and reduction of weed seedbanks with conservation tillage and crop rotation
    Murphy, SD
    Clements, DR
    Belaoussoff, S
    Kevan, PG
    Swanton, CJ
    WEED SCIENCE, 2006, 54 (01) : 69 - 77
  • [4] THE CROP ROTATION INFLUENCE OF THE WEED INFESTATION AT THE SPRING BARLEY CROP
    Neischl, A.
    Zelena, V
    Winkler, J.
    MENDELNET 2010, 2010, : 104 - 110
  • [5] Manure, tillage, and crop rotation: Effects on residual weed interference in spring barley cropping systems
    Stevenson, FC
    Legere, A
    Simard, RR
    Angers, DA
    Pageau, D
    Lafond, J
    AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 1998, 90 (04) : 496 - 504
  • [6] Crop and weed response to nutrient source, tillage and weed control method in a corn-soybean rotation
    Perron, F
    Légère, A
    Tremblay, G
    Simard, RR
    Angers, DA
    Hamel, C
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCE, 2001, 81 (03) : 561 - 571
  • [7] WEED SPECIES DIVERSITY AND CROP ROTATION
    Dvorackova, G.
    Neischl, A.
    Winkler, J.
    MENDELNET 2013, 2013, : 32 - 36
  • [8] SPRING BARLEY WEED INFESTATION IN VARIOUS CROP ROTATION CYCLES
    Neischl, A.
    Winkler, J.
    Zelena, V.
    MENDELNET 2012, 2012, : 133 - 141
  • [9] Weed community and species response to crop rotation, tillage, and nitrogen fertility
    Anderson, RL
    Tanaka, DL
    Black, AL
    Schweizer, EE
    WEED TECHNOLOGY, 1998, 12 (03) : 531 - 536
  • [10] Promotion of weed species diversity and reduction of weed seedbanks with conservation tillage and crop rotation (vol 54, pg 69, 2006)
    Murphy, SD
    Clements, DR
    Belaoussoff, S
    Kevan, PG
    Swanton, CJ
    WEED SCIENCE, 2006, 54 (03) : 606 - 606