4.4 Article

Herbicidal effects of extracts and residue incorporation of Datura metel against parthenium weed

Journal

NATURAL PRODUCT RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 15, Pages 1426-1437

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14786410903075440

Keywords

allelopathy; Datura metel; parthenium; weed management

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The present study was designed to evaluate the herbicidal activity of Datura metel against the noxious weed parthenium (Parthenium hysterophorus L.). In a laboratory bioassay, the effect of aqueous, methanol and n-hexane shoot and root extracts of 5, 10, 15 and 20% w/v (on a fresh weight basis) concentration of D. metel were tested against the germination and seedling growth of parthenium. Both aqueous and methanol extracts markedly suppressed the germination and seedling growth of parthenium. Generally, the effect of shoot extracts was more pronounced than the effect of root extracts. In foliar spray bioassay, aqueous and methanol shoot extracts of 10% w/v (on dry weight bases) concentrations were sprayed on one-week and two-week-old pot-grown parthenium seedlings. Two subsequent sprays were carried out at five day intervals each. Both the aqueous as well as the methanol extracts significantly suppressed shoot length as well as shoot and root biomass of one-week and two-week-old parthenium plants. In residue incorporation bioassay, crushed shoots of D. metel were incorporated in the soil at 1, 2, ... 5% w/w. Parthenium seeds were sown one week after residue incorporation and plants were harvested 40 days after sowing. Incorporation of 2-5% residues significantly reduced germination by 47-89%. Residues of 4 and 5% concentration significantly suppressed plant biomass by 90 and 97%, respectively. The present study concludes that root and shoots of D. metel contain herbicidal constituents for the management of parthenium weed.

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