4.7 Article

Germination Ecology of African Lovegrass (Eragrostis curvula) and Herbicide Options for Its Control

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AGRICULTURE-BASEL
卷 13, 期 5, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture13050920

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water stress; salt stress; temperature; burial depth; crop residue; post emergence herbicide

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African lovegrass is an invasive perennial grass that negatively impacts natural ecosystems globally. Experiments in Australia found that the Clifton population of this grass is more tolerant to salt and drought stress compared to the Crows Nest population. The study also showed that increasing burial depth and the presence of sorghum crop residue restrict the emergence of African lovegrass. Several postemergence herbicides were effective in controlling this invasive grass.
African lovegrass (Eragrostis curvula) is one of the invasive perennial grasses that continues to disturb natural ecosystems globally. Experiments were conducted in southeast Queensland, Australia, to evaluate the effects of temperature, salt stress, water stress, burial depth, and sorghum crop residue load on the emergence and efficacy of postemergence herbicides on two populations (Clifton and Crows Nest) of E. curvula. The optimal germination temperature regimes for E. curvula were 30/20 and 35/25 ?, but seeds did not germinate at temperatures commonly occurring in the Queensland winter (15/5 ?). Total darkness inhibited germination by 79%, indicating that the shade cover effect would reduce germination of E. curvula. The Clifton population tolerated a higher concentration of sodium chloride (160 mM) and osmotic potential (-0.8 MPa). Under both salt and water stress, germination was 31% and 20% greater in the Clifton population than in Crows Nest, respectively, suggesting that the Clifton population is more tolerant to salt and drought stress. The maximum germination was obtained for the surface seeds while emergence declined with increased burial depth up to 4 cm. No seedlings emerged from the 8 cm depth. The addition of sorghum residue amounts up to 8 Mg ha(-1) to the soil surface inhibited emergence compared to the no-residue treatment, suggesting that retention of heavy cereal residue will further delay or restrict emergence. Several postemergence herbicides were found to be effective in controlling E. curvula at an early stage. Information from this study will further compliment earlier studies on the targeted management of E. curvula populations.

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