Abstract

Herbicide weed control is difficult in the first years of perennial crop establishment or in minor crops, and plastic sheet mulches can leave persistent residues. Liquid spray-on mulch (hydromulch) might be a solution in these cases. To test three hydromulch formulations on perennial weed emergence, greenhouse assays were conducted for two years in two localities to evaluate their rhizome sprouting and shoot emergence. Data, obtained from a completely randomized block design, were analyzed by means of generalized linear mixed models with binomial distribution and logit link function; the effects of hydromulch, species, and their interaction were considered fixed, while the other sources of variation (i.e., locality, year, block and rhizome length) were considered random. All three hydromulches, based on wheat straw, rice husk, and used substrate for mushroom cultivation, were capable of reducing rhizome sprouting of all four species tested when compared to the non-mulched treatment. Many rhizomes sprouted but were trapped under the mulch layer, especially those of Paspalum dilatatum (87%), Cynodon dactylon, and Sorghum halepense (around 50%), while Cyperus rotundus was least affected by the hydromulch treatments (16%). All three blends showed promising results in the reduction of perennial weed emergence, warranting field trials to test combined weed management strategies.

Highlights

  • P. dilatatum was the species with the lowest sprouting (62%) and C. rotundus the highest (88%)

  • C. rotundus, S. halepense, and C. dactylon have a certain drought tolerance [17,29,30], while flooding could be detrimental to P. dilatatum [31]

  • All three tested hydromulch blends were effective in inhibiting rhizome sprouting and shoot emergence compared to the non-mulched control treatment (Tables 2 and 3); overall, the control obtained was highest for P. dilatatum, intermediate for

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Summary

Introduction

Weeds are a major issue in agriculture, causing 34% potential yield losses worldwide [1]. Hydromulching is a technique that has been used for several decades in some countries such as the USA or Canada, mainly for erosion control, and is applied for this purpose on slopes next to highways or similar facilities [4]. It is based on spraying a liquid blend, which solidifies on the ground, generally containing stabilized organic residues mixed with binders and water. Due to its capacity to reduce evaporation and weed emergence, the use of this technique has been extended to greenhouses, nurseries, parks, and railway facilities [4,5,6], and several different formulations have been tested

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