4.0 Article

Weed composition and cover after three years of soil fertility management in the central Brazilian Amazon: Compost, fertilizer, manure and charcoal applications

Journal

WEED BIOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages 69-76

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1445-6664.2005.00159.x

Keywords

charcoal; organic amendments; soil fertility; weeds

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Soils of the lowland tropics in the central Brazilian Amazon arc generally highly leached, acidic and nutrient-poor. Charcoal, combined with other soil amendments, might improve fertility but this, in turn, could lead to increased weed problems for agricultural production. This experiment was conducted to assess weed pressure and species composition on plots receiving various inorganic and organic soil amendments, including charcoal. Additions of inorganic fertilizer, compost and chicken manure resulted in increases in weed ground cover of 40, 22 and 53%, respectively, and increases in species richness of 20, 48, and63%, respectively. When chicken manure was applied, dominance by a few weed species was reduced, such that different species were more evenly represented. Although charcoal additions alone did not significantly affect weed ground cover or species richness, a synergistic effect occurred when both charcoal and inorganic fertilizers were applied. The percentage ground cover of weeds was 45% within plots receiving inorganic fertilizer, 2% within plots receiving charcoal and 66% within plots receiving both amendments. Improvements in the fertility of nutrient-poor soils of the tropics might increase weed pressure and make the development of effective weed management strategies more critical. Theseeffects on weed populations were observed nearly 2.5 years after the additionof charcoal, chicken manure and compost, and >1 year after the last application of inorganic fertilizer.

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