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Research Project:
ECOLOGICALLY-SOUND PEST, WATER AND SOIL MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES FOR NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS CROPPING SYSTEMS
Location: Agricultural Systems Research Unit
Title: Diversifying spring wheat systems influences weed community
Authors
Submitted to: Agronomy Society of America, Crop Science Society of America, Soil Science Society of America Meeting
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: August 4, 2010
Publication Date: N/A
Technical Abstract:
Weed competition constrains dryland crop production in the northern Great Plains. We initiated a field trial in 2004 comparing four crop rotations, with each component in a two-by-two matrix of tillage (conventional vs. zero tillage) and management (conventional vs. ecological) systems. Rotations are continuous spring wheat (SW), SW-pea, SW-barley hay-pea, and SW-barley hay-corn-pea. Ecological management practices vary by crop and are designed to improve competitiveness with weeds and snow capture. Over five years, the three-year rotation had lower densities of green foxtail, kochia, and total weeds prior to herbicide application. Across rotations, densities of wild oat, green foxtail, and total weeds were greater under conventional management than ecological management before herbicide application and at harvest. Spring wheat in diversified rotations had lower density of wild oat, green foxtail, kochia, and total weeds than did continuous spring wheat. Ecological management and diversified rotations improved weed management under semi-arid conditions.
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