Influence of weed-control practices in the first crop on the tillage requirements for the succeeding crops in an upland rice-maize-cowpea cropping sequence

1991 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-33
Author(s):  
P.C. Elliot ◽  
K. Moody
2008 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chandra Vir Singh ◽  
Bijoy Chandra Ghosh ◽  
Bishwa Nath Mittra ◽  
Rama Kant Singh

Weed Science ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 654-659 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel A. Ball

Changes in the weed seedbank due to crop production practices are an important determinant of subsequent weed problems. Research was conducted to evaluate effects of primary tillage (moldboard plowing and chisel plowing), secondary tillage (row cultivation), and herbicides on weed species changes in the soil seedbank in three irrigated row crop rotational sequences over a 3-yr period. The cropping sequences consisted of continuous corn for 3 yr, continuous pinto beans for 3 yr, or sugarbeets for 2 yr followed by corn in the third year. Cropping sequence was the most dominant factor influencing species composition in the seedbank. This was partly due to herbicide use in each cropping sequence producing a shift in the weed seedbank in favor of species less susceptible to applied herbicides. A comparison between moldboard and chisel plowing indicated that weed seed of predominant species were more prevalent near the soil surface after chisel plowing. The number of predominant annual weed seed over the 3-yr period increased more rapidly in the seedbank after chisel plowing compared to moldboard plowing unless effective weed control could be maintained to produce a decline in seedbank number. In this case, seedbank decline was generally more rapid after moldboard plowing. Row cultivation generally reduced seedbanks of most species compared to uncultivated plots in the pinto bean and sugarbeet sequences. A simple model was developed to validate the observation that rate of change in the weed seedbank is influenced by type of tillage and weed control effectiveness.


Author(s):  
Munir Abdulmumin Yawale ◽  
Muhammad Sani Garko ◽  
Kabiru Dauda Dawaki ◽  
Muhammad Auwal Hussaini

1991 ◽  
Vol 116 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Johnson ◽  
P. G. Lee ◽  
D. Wilman

SUMMARYAgronomic research was carried out on upland rice in Toledo District, Belize, in 1979–86, with the objective of improving returns from the traditional system of shifting cultivation and of examining the potential for reducing the demand for new land by cropping for more than one season. The rice was grown in the wet season on land cleared from forest by slash and burn, using a traditional planting technique, placing seed in holes made with a pointed stick.In a series of fertilizer experiments, in which rice was grown for up to 7 consecutive years, urea and triple superphosphate both increased grain yield, whereas muriate of potash had no effect. Mean yield in the fifth year was 85 % of that in the first. Urea and triple superphosphate both increased the number of full grains/panicle.A slash and mulch weed control treatment before sowing resulted in low yields of grain in the third year; yield after the use of propanil and 2,4-D (after sowing) was, on average, 77% of the yield after hand weeding; omitting weed control after sowing led to very low yields, particularly in the second and third years.In the varieties Bluebonnet and C22, grain yield was increased by reducing the distance between stations, particularly where 6, rather than 15, seeds were sown per station. Reducing the distance between stations increased the leaf area index during crop development and the number of panicles/m2, which more than counterbalanced reductions in the number and area of leaf blades per plant, the number of panicles per plant and the number of full grains per panicle. However, the yield/kg of seed sown and per hour spent planting was greatest at the widest spacing. C22 produced more panicles per plant and a greater weight of grain per plant and per hectare than Bluebonnet.It was concluded that returns from the traditional system can be improved and the demand for new land reduced.


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