SPECIES COMPOSITION OF WEEDS IN RAPESEED CROPS IN GEOGRAPHICALLY REMOTE REGIONS ON THE EXAMPLE OF LIPETSK AND SVERDLOVSK REGIONS

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 96-107
Author(s):  
N.N. Luneva ◽  
◽  
A.S. Tret'yakova ◽  
P.V. Kondratkov ◽  
V.L. Zakharov ◽  
...  

The aim of the study is to identify differences in the species composition of weeds in spring rapeseed crops in two geographically remote regions of the Russian Federation – Lipetsk (Central black earth region) and Sverdlovsk (Ural region). The analysis was carried out using methods of comparative Floristics and distribution of species by classes of constancy of occurrence. Differences between segetal weed flora elements in the agrophytocenoses of canola compare regions, as in floral structure, consisting of the first two "triads" of the floristic spectra and confirmed the low rate coefficient of species similarity. Species differences are represented by species that pollute rapeseed crops only in one of the compared regions. Among the species common to the agrophytocenoses of rapeseed in the two regions are such species as, Chenopodium album L., Echinochloa crusgalli (L.) Beauv., Silene praténsis (Rafn) Godr., Euphorbia helioscopia L, Fallopia convolvulus (L.) A. Loeve, Viola arvensis Murr. they are characterized by higher rates of occurrence in the Lipetsk region, and Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.) Medik., Cirsium setosum (Willd.) Bess, Erodium cicutarium (L.) L. Her., Thlaspi arvense L. – in the Sverdlovsk region. The dominant species in the Lipetsk region are Raphanus raphanistrum L., Chenopodium album L., Echinochloa crusgalli (L.) Beauv., Silene praténsis (Rafn) Godr., and in the Sverdlovsk region - Galium vaillantii DC., Stellaria media (L.) Vill., Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.) Medik., Thlaspi arvense L., Chenopodium album L., Cirsium setosum (Willd.) Bess. To protect rapeseed crops from weeds in different regions that differ in terms of heat and moisture availability, it is necessary to develop regional protection systems, preceded by mandatory monitoring studies.

Author(s):  
Н. Н. Лунева

Цель исследования – выявление различий в видовом составе сорных растений в посевах зерновых культур в географически отдаленных регионах (СЗР и ЦЧР). Произведен сравнительный анализ данных обследования 30 полей зерновых культур в ряде районов Ленинградской области в 2014-2016 гг. и 29 полей в районах Липецкой области в 2016-2018 гг., осуществленных по оригинальной методике автора. Использованы традиционные методы флористического анализа, а также распределение видов по классам постоянства встречаемости. Различия между сегетальными элементами флоры зерновых культур двух областей заключаются в более высоких показателях флористического богатства и таксономического разнообразия в Ленинградской области, а также различной очередностью семейств в первых двух «триадах» сравниваемых флористических спектров. Более глубокие отличия заключаются не только в наличии дифференциальных видов (63 вида в посевах зерновых культур только в Ленинградской области и 45 видов в посевах зерновых только в Липецкой области), но и в разных показателях встречаемости одинаковых видов, засоряющих посевы зерновых культур в обоих регионах. К более высоким классам постоянства встречаемости в Ленинградской области, чем в Липецкой, относятся виды: Chenopodium album L., Tripleurospermum inodorum (L.) Sch. Bip., Matricaria discoídea DC., Taraxacum officinale Wigg., Thlaspi arvense L., Stellaria media (L.) Vill., Elytrigia repens (L.) Nevski, Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.) Medik., Fumaria officinalis L. и Fallopia convolvulus (L.) A. Loeve, Achillea millefolium L., Artemisia vulgaris L., Sonchus arvensis L., Myosotis arvensis (L.) Hill., Silene vulgaris (Moench) Garcke, Plantago major L., Persicaria lapathifolia (L.) S.F. Gray, Polygonum aviculare L. На территории Липецкой области такими видами являются – Silene praténsis (Rafn) Godr,. Echinochloa crusgalli (L.) Beauv., Galeopsis tetrahit L., Galium aparine L., Convolvulus arvensis L. В засоренности посевов ячменя в разных областях также выявлены различия: зарегистрировано 42 вида сорных растений в посевах ячменя только Ленинградской области (среди которых доминирует Matricaria discoídea DC.) и 31 вид в посевах ячменя только в Липецкой области (среди которых доминируют Echinochloa crusgalli (L.) Beauv., и Amaranthus retroflexus L.). Из 29 одинаковых видов в посевах ячменя обеих областей, в Ленинградской области преобладают Chenopodium album L., Fumaria officinalis L., Tripleurospermum inodorum (L.) Sch. Bip., а в Липецкой Convolvulus arvensis L., Galeopsis tetrahit L., Raphanus raphanistrum L. Следовательно, фитосанитарный прогноз распространения видов сорных растений в посевах зерновых культур в целом, и в посевах ячменя, в частности, как и системы защиты от сорных растений будут отличаться в двух сравниваемых регионах.


2009 ◽  
Vol 45 (No. 2) ◽  
pp. 59-65
Author(s):  
J. Štolcová

During 1997–1999, the damage and mortality caused by insect herbivores to pigweed (<I>Chenopodium album</I>) and wild buckwheat (<I>Fallopia convolvulus</I>) were studied in an early fallow field at Prague-Ruzyně. The highest abundances of <I>Ch. Album</I> and <I>F. convolvulus</I> (83 and 3.5 plants/m<sup>2</sup>, resp.) were recorded in 1999, the lowest (11.6 and 0.3 plants/m<sup>2</sup>, resp.) in 1998. Mortality was low in 1997 (9.6% and 1.4%, resp.) and 1999 (4.0% and 2.5%, resp.), but high in 1998 (25% and 10%, resp.) due to concurrent drought. In accordance with previous studies on <I>Thlaspi arvense</I>, herbivory and concurrent drought may increase the mortality of <I>Ch. Album</I> and <I>F. convolvulus</I> seedlings, and thereby alter the species composition of the weed community during secondary succession.


2001 ◽  
Vol 37 (No. 3) ◽  
pp. 121-127
Author(s):  
J. Štolcová

The effect of sporadic cultivation on seedling establishment on a field abandoned for 1–4 years was investigated in small-plot trials at Prague-Ruzyně in the spring periods 1993–1995. Cultivation included autumn ploughing, spring harrowing and rolling on all plots that were subsequently left to spontaneous weed infestation. Some plots were then mowed or shallowly cultivated in mid-June and late July, others were left without treatment. No significant differences in seedling establishment were found between plots with different treatments. The number of species varied between years, but without a trend to species enrichment or impoverishment. In all years most species were annuals, and species composition did not change in the course of the experiment. The dominant species were Amaranthus retroflexus, Lamium amplexicaule, Echinochloa crus-galli, Chenopodium album, Silene noctiflora and Thlaspi arvense. Species diversity during the experimental years increased due to decreasing dominance of A. retroflexus.


2010 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Heller

„Flax specialists”-weed species extinct in Poland? The results of a research on segetal weed communities in fibre flax in Poland are presented, with respect to different regions of cultivation, and changes in the level of infestation during the past forty years. Observations on composition and abundance of weed infestations were made in fields in six experimental farms at the Institute of Natural Fibres and Medicinal Plants. The observations conducted in the period 1967-2008 did not show the occurrence of weed species from the group of so-called "flax specialists": Lolium remotum Schrank, Spergula arvensis L. subsp. maxima (Weiche) O. Schwarz, Camelina alyssum (Mill.) Thell. and Cuscuta epilinum Weihe Ex Boenn. In Poland, weed populations in fibre flax consist of species typical for cereals and root crops: Chenopodium album L., Polygonum convolvulus L., Viola arvensis Murr., Stellaria media Vill., Lamium amplexicaule L., Thlaspi arvense L., Elymus repens (L.) Gould, and Polygonum nodosum Pers.


2018 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanna Golebiowska ◽  
Renata Kieloch ◽  
Maciej Rdzanek ◽  
Jakub Topolski

Experiments to evaluate 40% and 80% methanol extracts prepared from the aboveground parts of two <em>Solanum nigrum</em> biotypes and from the roots of two <em>Avena sativa</em> biotypes were used to test the growth and development of some weed species and agropathogens. The species collected from different crop fields were <em>Viola arvensis</em>, <em>Chenopodium album</em>, <em>Stellaria media</em>, <em>Papaver rhoeas</em>, and <em>Thlaspi arvense</em> together with the pathogenic fungi <em>Fusarium avenaceum</em>, <em>F. culmorum</em>, and <em>F. oxysporum</em>. Plant morphological changes and significant fresh weight reduction of <em>Viola arvensis</em> were observed when treated with both 40% and 80% extracts. A similar response was found in <em>C. album</em>, but only when plants were treated with an 80% extract obtained from plants of <em>S. nigrum</em> collected from a maize field. The most susceptible to both extracts from <em>A. fatua</em> roots growing in a spring wheat field were <em>C. album</em> and <em>S. media</em>, whereas <em>V. arvensis</em> was only susceptible to the 80% extract. The addition of the extracts obtained from <em>A. fatua</em> to PDA medium at concentrations of 0.1% and 1% contributed to significant reductions in the mycelium growth of all three <em>Fusarium</em> species. The extract obtained from <em>S. nigrum</em> added to PDA medium at 1% concentration slightly stimulated mycelium growth of <em>F. oxysporum</em>.


2020 ◽  
pp. 106-119
Author(s):  
Nina Rudska

The article confirms the feasibility and effectiveness of modern herbicides in corn crops for various methods of tillage. According to the research results, a mixed type of weediness is formed in corn crops, among which the largest share is occupied by late spring late spring species, which accounted for 71,8 % of the total number of weeds that appeared during the growing season of the crop. These included: millet of chickens (Echinochloa crus-galli (L.) Roem.) – 16,1 %, blue bristles (Setaria glauca L.) – 30,4 %, among dicotyledons: small-flowered Galinsoga (Galinsoga rarviflora Cav. ) – 18,4 %, common thyroid (Amaranthus retroflexus L.) – 5,4 %. Early spring was 7,6 %, including white quinoa (Chenopodium album L.) – 7,5 %. Among wintering species, the shepherd's purse ordinary (Capsela bursa pastoris L. Medic) prevailed. – 3,9 %, odorless chamomile (Matricaria perforata Merat.) – 3,2 %, Field yarut (Thlaspi arvense L.) – 2,5 %, field violet (Viola arvensis Murr.) – 2,0 %, with ephemera - medium asterisk (Stellaria media L.) – 5,3 %. Perennial rootstock and weeds of sow thistle pink (Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop.) 0,9%, yellow sow thistle (Sonchus arvensis L.) – 0,1 %, field bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis L.) – 0,9 %, of perennial rhizome - creeping wheatgrass (Elytrigia repens L.) – 0.8%. An insignificant proportion of the species composition of weeds was occupied by perennial strzynekoreni and weeds. Also, when conducting research, it was found that the density of corn standing in the phase of full germination on arable land was in the range of 78,3–78,6 pcs./m2. For small disk processing, this indicator decreased to 78,1–78,2 pcs./m2. For the period of maize harvesting, differences in the density of standing of corn during various methods of tillage were also noted. So, on plowing under the conditions of herbicide protection, the density was high and was in the range of 72,9–7,2 thousand units. / Ha, while for small disk – 72,3–72,6 thousand units./ha. Herbicidal protection options ensured the death of weeds by 89–100 % within 30 days after their application. At the time of harvesting the crop, the decrease in the number of weeds compared to the untreated areas amounted to 71–98 %. The most effective was the double application of roundup max 2,4 l/ha in phases 3 and 8 of the leaves in corn. The highest yield of corn grain was obtained due to the double use of the herbicide roundup max at a rate of 2,4 l/ha. In the case of police processing, the collection was 9,4 t/ha, and for small-scale processing, it was 9,2 t/ha. Key words: corn, soil cultivation, weeds, herbicides, efficiency, productivity.


Weed Science ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin C. Hill ◽  
Karen A. Renner ◽  
Christy L. Sprague

Winter annual weeds protect the soil from erosion and retain nutrients during the winter; however, they can also act as a host for crop pests and pathogens and impede planting. Increased knowledge of the reproductive biology and the seed fate of winter annuals would be useful to improve management and crop productivity. The objectives of this research were to determine the recruitment biology of shepherd's-purse, henbit, common chickweed, and field pennycress, including seed production, dispersal, dormancy, and seedling emergence, based on growing degree days (GDD). Henbit was the least prolific of the four weeds studied, producing 800 to 40,000 seeds m−2at naturally occurring densities; shepherd's-purse was the most prolific, producing 11,000 to 400,000 seeds m−2with 40 to 230 plants m−2. Fifty percent seed rain occurred for henbit, common chickweed, shepherd's-purse, and field pennycress at 620, 790, 880, and 1300 GDDBase,0C, respectively. Overall, seeds were dormant for all species at the time of dispersal. In 2 of 3 yr, dormancy of later-dispersed common chickweed decreased after 6 mo of storage at natural, fluctuating temperatures in the absence of water. The emergence patterns of the four species followed the Gompertz equation and were indicative of facultative winter annuals. The emergence patterns by rate were similar between henbit and common chickweed and between shepherd's-purse and field pennycress. Seed production, dispersal, dormancy, and seedling emergence were influenced by moisture; therefore, including a precipitation or soil moisture component into a GDD model (such as the use of hydrothermal time) would improve the accuracy of predicting winter annual reproduction, seed fate, and emergence.


1957 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. A. Friesen ◽  
D. R. Walker

Oats, flax and barley were sprayed with various formulations of MCP (2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid) and 2,4-D (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) at a number of Experimental Farms in Western Canada in 1954 and 1955. Each formulation was applied at 4 and 8 ounces of acid equivalent per acre at each of two dates, viz., Date 1, when the weeds were in the seedling stage less than 3 inches in height; and Date 2, at a stage coinciding with the first appearance of buds on the major weed species.Stinkweed (Thlaspi arvense, L.), wild mustard (Brassica kaber (DC.) L.C. Wheeler var. pinnatifida (Stokes) L.C. Wheeler), lamb's quarters (Chenopodium album L.), Russian pigweed (Axyris amarantoides L.), and ball mustard (Neslia paniculata L.), were effectively controlled by each of the MCP and 2,4-D formulations used. Russian thistle (Salsola kali L.), and red-root pigweed (Amaranthus retroflexus L.), were not satisfactorily controlled by MCP, whereas hemp nettle (Galeopsis tetrahit L.) was not controlled by 2,4-D. Wild buckwheat (Polygonum convolvulus L.) was not controlled by any of the treatments. Each treatment was more effective when applied during the seedling stage of the weeds.On the basis of wood control and yield of grain the results of this study favour the use of MCP over 2,4-D with either oats or flax. Oats was significantly more tolerant to MCP, particularly if treated during the early growth stages when weed competition was most critical. With flax, the difference in tolerance was most pronounced in favour of MCP at the later date of treatment. The 2,4-D ester and low volatile ester resulted in a preponderance of plant deformities, lowered the yields of both oats and flax and delayed the maturity of flax significantly. Barley yields in this study were not adversely affected by any of the treatments.


2007 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 76 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Garbary ◽  
Barry R. Taylor

Over 85 records of 23 species of blooming, herbaceous angiosperms were made at 19 sites in Antigonish County between 7 and 21 January 2006, when daytime temperatures reached 15°C. These observations followed an unusually warm fall and early winter. All species were observed on waste ground or in fields and garden plots, except for Epigaea repens L. which was part of ground vegetation in a sparsely wooded site. The primary families represented were Asteraceae (six species), Brassicaceae (six species) and Carophyllaceae (four species). The most commonly observed plants were Taraxacum officinale (L.) Weber (11 sites), Capsella bursa-pastoris (L.) Medik. (nine sites), Thlaspi arvense L. (three sites) and Stellaria media (L.) Vill. (four sites). Many plants and inflorescences were conspicuously frost-damaged, and flowers were rarely fully open. In several species, e.g., T. arvense and Cerastium vulgatum L., many individual plants looked normal and there was no evidence of frost damage. These observations are the latest flowering records for Nova Scotia.


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