arable weeds
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Author(s):  
Varvara O. Bakumenko ◽  
◽  
Ekaterina G. Ershova ◽  
◽  

In this work we present the results of spore and pollen analysis of forest soils from the Zvenigorod biological station of Moscow State University (Moscow Region, Russia). A comparative analysis of forest soils formed on the site of historical fields of the XVIII–XIX centuries and beyond showed that a specific complex of pollen and spores remains in the residual arable horizons, characteristic only of soils that have passed through the stages of plowing and fallow. It includes pollen from cultivated cereals and arable weeds (buckwheat, cornflower blue), spores of the mace-shaped plaunus (Lycopodium clavatum), as well as spores of the mosses Riccia glauca and Anthoceros spp. The latter are exclusive indicators of fallows, since they are practically not found in other habitats. The identified pollen indicators can be used in landscape and archaeological research to interpret the data of spore-pollen analysis of cultural layers, buried soils, gully-ravine sediments. They can also be used to define the boundaries of ancient fields under modern vegetation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Braithwaite ◽  
Luke Gaskell

Many years of fieldwork have led the authors to hypothesise that there is a single relatively species-rich arable weed community present across the Scottish Borders that is best expressed in broad-leaved root crops and in set-aside on imperfectly-drained soils, while the species-poor communities typically found in cereal crops are a degraded form of this. 102 samples have been studied to test this hypothesis and to search for a community typical of slightly calcareous well-drained soils. The community typical of imperfectly-drained soils has been defined and is considered to be a species-rich variant of the NVC OV13 Stellaria media-Capsella bursa-pectoris open habitat community. Species typical of well-drained soils have been shown to be scarce and not to form a distinct community, though they may well have done so in the past.


Agronomy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1215
Author(s):  
Shahal Abbo ◽  
Simcha Lev-Yadun ◽  
Avi Gopher

A “cultivation prior to domestication”, or a “pre-domestication cultivation” phase features in many reconstructions of Near Eastern plant domestication. Archaeobotanists who accept this notion search for evidence to support the assumption regarding a wild plant’s cultivation phase, which in their view, preceded and eventually led to plant domestication. The presence of non-crop plant remains in the archaeobotanical record interpreted as arable weeds, i.e., weeds of cultivation, is viewed as a strong argument in support of the pre-domestication cultivation phase. Herein, we show that the simple practice of harvest by hand-pulling (uprooting) has the potential to secure an almost weed-free harvest. Indeed, rather clean (weed-free) Neolithic seed caches from a range of relevant sites were documented in archaeobotanical reports. These reports, alongside ethnographic observations suggest that (in certain cases) ancient harvest may have been carried out by selective hand-pulling. Hence, one has no reason to view archaeobotanical assemblages from occupation sites as fully representative of cultivated fields. Therefore, the concept of “arable—pre-domestication weeds”, its logic, and its potential contribution to the prevailing reconstructions of Near Eastern plant domestication need be reconsidered.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Alexander Weide ◽  
John G. Hodgson ◽  
Hagar Leschner ◽  
Guy Dovrat ◽  
Jade Whitlam ◽  
...  

Hoehnea ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kingsley Chinedu Daraojimba ◽  
Cynthia Fernandes Pinto da Luz ◽  
Marcia Aguiar de Barros

ABSTRACT Vegetation history of southwestern Nigerian forest during the past ~1,416 cal yr BP (534 - 644 AD) is reconstructed based on palynological data from a core from Awerele, wetland in Orile-Owu. Six palynological zones were stablished. Zone I (195-175 cm; ~1,416 cal yr BP) was a period marked by low value of charcoal particles associated with low frequency of Elaeis guineensis pollen. In Zone II (175-135 cm), the environment experienced wet conditions depicted by high percentage mainly of Cyperaceae and fern spores. Further, the arable weeds and E. guineensis increased values, showing the higher frequency of Margaritaria discoidea pollen grains, coupled with a low charcoal amount. Zone III (135-105 cm) to Zone VI (50-0 cm) were characterised by the increase of E. guineensis and raising of charcoal particles, followed by the presence of plants exploited for food and medicinal purposes, which may indicate enlarged local landscape disturbance, probably associated with humans’ activities. Archaeological evidence suggest that humans occupied the Orile-Owu area from ~ 412 cal yr BP (AD 1,538 - 1,635). The pollen data displayed the persistence of a forest-savanna mosaic, associated with ecological perturbations, which were also noticed in other parts of sub-saharan Africa on the same period.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 169-170
Author(s):  
Jana Bürger ◽  
Helen Metcalfe ◽  
Christoph von Redwitz ◽  
Alicia Cirujeda ◽  
Silvia Fogliatto ◽  
...  

“Arable Weeds and Management in Europe” is a collection of weed vegetation records from arable fields in Europe, initiated within the Working Group Weeds and Biodiversity of the European Weed Research Society (EWRS). Vegetation-plot data from this scientific community was not previously contributed to databases. We aim to prove the usefulness of collection for large scale studies through some first analyses. We hope to assure other weed scientists who have signalled willingness to share data, and plan to construct a full data base, making the data available for easy sharing. Presently, the collection has over 60,000 records, taken between 1996 and 2015. Many more studies for potential inclusion exist. Data originate mostly from studies exploring the effect of agricultural management on weed vegetation. The database is accompanied with extensive meta-data on crop and weed management on the surveyed fields. The criteria for inclusion were a minimum amount of information on the cultivated crop, and a georeference. Most fields were surveyed repeatedly, i.e. transects, multiple random plots, or repeated visits. All surveys aimed to record the complete vegetation on the plots. Sometimes, taxa were identified only to genus level, due to survey dates very early in the vegetation period. Plant taxonomy is standardized to the Euro+Med PlantBase.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 285-308
Author(s):  
Mark O. Hill ◽  
Christopher D. Preston ◽  
Jonathan D. Shanklin

Cambridgeshire data collected for the BSBI’s Atlas 2020 project include 347,496 records at monad (1 km) or finer resolution. We used these data to cluster taxa by spherical k-means to produce 21 clusters of taxa with similar patterns of distribution. Some of the clusters correspond to well-defined habitats such as chalk grassland, ancient woodland, traditional fenland, and saline riversides and roadsides. Other clusters were less expected, corresponding to arable clayland, washland (the Ouse and Nene washes), waste ground and garden escapes. There was a cluster of ubiquitous species and another of common arable weeds. The distributions of the clusters are displayed as coincidence maps. Some species are intermediate between two clusters. These can be recognised by their relatively poor goodness of fit to any one cluster. The clusters differ markedly in ecological attributes and whether they include rare or threatened species. We interpret these differences using Ellenberg values and the vascular plant Red List for England.


Agronomy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1611
Author(s):  
Muthukumar V. Bagavathiannan ◽  
Hugh J. Beckie ◽  
Guillermo R. Chantre ◽  
Jose L. Gonzalez-Andujar ◽  
Ramon G. Leon ◽  
...  

In weed science and management, models are important and can be used to better understand what has occurred in management scenarios, to predict what will happen and to evaluate the outcomes of control methods. To-date, perspectives on and the understanding of weed models have been disjointed, especially in terms of how they have been applied to advance weed science and management. This paper presents a general overview of the nature and application of a full range of simulation models on the ecology, biology, and management of arable weeds, and how they have been used to provide insights and directions for decision making when long-term weed population trajectories are impractical to be determined using field experimentation. While research on weed biology and ecology has gained momentum over the past four decades, especially for species with high risk for herbicide resistance evolution, knowledge gaps still exist for several life cycle parameters for many agriculturally important weed species. More research efforts should be invested in filling these knowledge gaps, which will lead to better models and ultimately better inform weed management decision making.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Fried ◽  
Laura Armengot ◽  
Jonathan Storkey ◽  
Bérenger Bourgeois ◽  
Sabrina Gaba ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee Raye

Scotia Illustrata was published in 1684 and contains a section (II:1) describing 662 ‘naturally occurring plants of Scotland’. This paper sets out to identify and discuss the species in the text. It was possible to identify 652 species from the text and 396 could be securely identified. Most of these are species which are widespread today, but there are some important exceptions. Three arable weeds are mentioned which now seem to be extinct in Scotland: Lolium temulentum, Scandix pecten-veneris and Euphorbia exigua. There are also references to one possibly-extinct river species (Sium latifolium), and one coastal species (Centaurea calcitrapa). Two species, now rare in Scotland, are described in the text as species widespread on roads: Cynoglossum officinale and Hyoscyamus niger.  


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