4.7 Article

Effect of 20-years crop rotation and different strategies of fertilization on weed seedbank

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DOI: 10.1016/j.agee.2023.108580

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Crop fertilization; Crop rotation; Herbicides; Rotational effects; Weeds seedbank shift

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Crop rotation length and fertilization have little effect on weed community evolution, with 98% of weed species being indifferent to these factors. The dominance of certain weeds is a result of inadequate management, particularly for late emergence and post-harvest weeds.
Crop rotation is thought to reduce weed density and maintain species diversity, preventing the domination of few competitive weeds. In this work rotations of 1, 2, 4 and 6 years length have been compared in a long-term experiment since 1976. In order to detect the effect of rotation length and fertilization on weed community evolution, a specific study was performed on weed seedbank with soil sampling in 1993 and 2012.Results: show that weed density was not affected by rotation length or fertilization type or rate, and that about 98% of weed species were indifferent to the factors applied. The dominance of Portulaca oleracea and increment of a few grass weeds were consequences of an inadequate management of late emergence and post-harvest weeds. Furthermore, no significant changes in the distribution of seeds longevity groups occurred in the seed-bank from 1993 to 2012. In cropping systems where herbicides are used according to best practices or to In-tegrated Weed Management principles, the effect of rotation on weeds is hard to detect even in long-term experiments. For this, the effect of herbicides must be included in a more general theory of rotational effects.

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