4.7 Article

Mulch-Based No-Tillage Effects on Weed Community and Management in an Organic Vegetable System

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy9100594

Keywords

agroecology; cover crops; ecological weed management; weed biodiversity; Amaranthus retroflexus; Portulaca oleracea

Funding

  1. Organic Farming Office of the Italian Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Forestry, in the frame of the National Action Plan for Organic food and farming

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Weeds can cooperate with the agroecosystem's functioning by providing ecosystem services. Effective weed management should mitigate negative weed-crop interference, while maintaining a functional and balanced weed community. In a two-year trial, the in-line/roller crimper (RC) was used to terminate an agroecological service crop (ASC; here barley, Hordeum vulgare L.) before organic zucchini (Cucurbita pepo, L.) and compared with green manure (GM) ASC and tilled no-ASC with Mater-Bi mulch on the rows (No_ASC). Zucchini yield, soil N availability, weed density/cover, biomass, and community composition were assessed. Analysis of variance, exploratory statistical analysis, and non-parametric inferential approaches were run, respectively, on agronomic data, species-specific weed frequencies, and Shannon diversity. Zucchini yield was the highest in No_ASC, due to soil N immobilization under high C:N barley residues in GM and RC. Multivariate analysis discriminated RC from tilled systems, outlining a specific ensemble of weed species correlated to Shannon diversity. From zucchini fruit set, RC selectively favored Polygonum aviculare L. and Helminthotheca echioides (L.), reasonably because of their oligotrophy and creeping habit. Their dominance finally caused low RC weed control. Results highlight strong weed selective pressure by the mulch-based no-tillage. Understanding the mechanisms underpinning the impact of soil management practices on weed community can drive towards a tailor-made and more effective weed management.

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