Increased density and spatial uniformity increase weed suppression by spring wheat

Authors: OLSEN, J1; KRISTENSEN, L1; WEINER, J1; GRIEPENTROG, HW2

Source: Weed Research, Volume 45, Number 4, August 2005 , pp. 316-321(6)

Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell

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Abstract:

OlsenJ, KristensenL, WeinerJ & GriepentrogHW (2005) Increased density and spatial uniformity increase weed suppression by spring wheat. Weed Research45, 316–321. Summary

It has been hypothesized that increased crop density and spatial uniformity can increase weed suppression and thereby play a role in weed management. Field experiments were performed over 2 years to investigate the effects of the density and spatial arrangement of spring wheat (Triticum aestivum) on weed biomass and wheat yield in weed-infested fields. We used three crop spatial patterns (normal rows, random and uniform) and three densities (204, 449 and 721 seeds m-2), plus a fourth density (1000 seeds m-2) in the random pattern. Increased crop density reduced weed biomass in all three patterns. Weed biomass was lower and crop biomass higher in wheat sown in the random and uniform patterns than in normal rows in both years. At 449 seeds m-2, weed biomass was 38% lower in the uniform and 27% lower in the random pattern than in rows. There was evidence of decreasing grain yield due to intraspecific competition only at 1000 seeds m-2. The results not only confirm that increasing density and increasing crop spatial uniformity increase the suppression of weeds, but also suggest that a very high degree of spatial uniformity may not be necessary to achieve a major increase in weed suppression by cereal crops. Rows represent a very high degree of spatial aggregation. Decreasing this aggregation increased weed suppression almost as much as sowing the crop in a highly uniform spatial pattern. While the random pattern produced as much crop biomass and suppressed weeds almost as well as the uniform pattern, the uniform pattern gave the highest yield.

Keywords: Triticum aestivum; crop–weed competition; seeding rate; spatial distribution

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3180.2005.00456.x

Affiliations: 1: Department of Ecology, Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Frederiksberg, Denmark 2: Department of Agricultural Sciences, Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Taastrup, Denmark

Publication date: 2005-08-01

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