Abstract

When farmers first shift from conventional tillage (CT) to conservation agriculture (CA) practices, the control of weeds may be more difficult, due to the absence of tillage. However, continuous CA, over several years, may alter the weed seedbank. The nature of the weed seedbank changes over time, in intensively cropped rice-based rotations that are typical of the Eastern Gangetic Plain, are not well understood. Two on-farm CA experiments were sampled (in Beluapara after 3 years and Digram after 5 years) in Bangladesh for the effects of strip planting (SP) and bed planting (BP) at both the sites, plus no-tillage (NT) in Beluapara, and increased retention of the residue of previous crops (20% vs. 50%). The conventional tillage (CT) and 20% residue was the control treatment. The weed seedbank in 0–15 cm soil was quantified by assessing the emergence of weeds from soils collected from the field after irrigation, (Boro) rice in Digram and wheat in Beluapara, and they were allowed to emerge in trays in a shade-house experiment. The year-round count of emerged weeds at both the locations revealed the fewest number of weed species (especially broadleaf weeds), and the lowest weed density and biomass in SP, followed by CT, BP, and NT, with 50% crop residue mulch. Relative to CT, the SP, BP, and NT produced relatively more perennials weeds, as follows: Alternanthera denticulata ((R.) Brown.), Cyperus rotundus (L.), Dentella repens (L.), Jussia deccurence (Walt.), Leersia hexandra (L.), and Solanum torvum (Sw.), which was the opposite of CT that was enriched with the following annual weeds: Cyperus iria (L.), Digitaria sanguinalis (L.), Euphorbia parviflora (L.), Fimbristylis miliacea (L.), Lindernia antipoda (L.), L. hyssopifolia (L.), and Monochoria hastata (L.). The soil weed seed bank reduced by 13% in SP, while it increased by 19% and 76% in BP and NT, respectively, compared with CT. The species diversity reduced in SP and NT, by 24% and 11%, respectively, but increased by 2% in BP. In 50% residue, the soil weed seed bank and species diversity reduced by 16% and 14%, respectively, relative to that of 20% residue. The continuous practice of CA, for 3 or more years, in two rice-based crop rotations, decreased the size of the weed seedbank, but increased the relative proliferation of specific perennial weeds.

Highlights

  • Conservation agriculture (CA) has a major influence on the relative abundance of weed species, while weed control is perceived as one of the most challenging issues with the initial adoption of CA [1]

  • In NT, we found the dominance of the following perennial species: Alternanthera denticulata, Dentella repens, Solanum torvum, Cyperus rotundus, and Eleusine indica over the annual species (Table 1)

  • The number of weed species reduced in both strip planting (SP) and NT, by 24% and 11%, respectively, but increased in bed planting (BP) by 2%

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Summary

Introduction

Conservation agriculture (CA) has a major influence on the relative abundance of weed species, while weed control is perceived as one of the most challenging issues with the initial adoption of CA [1]. Minimum soil disturbance of the CA system generally favors the emergence of perennial weed species, relative to annual weed species in the seedbank [3]. In no-tillage systems, the annual grass populations usually increase [5], concurrent with a decrease in the populations of dicotyledonous weeds. The seedbank of annual and perennial grasses, perennial dicot species, wind-disseminated species, and volunteer crop species was reported to increase, and the annual dicot species was reported to decrease in a reduced tillage (RT) system [6]. Notwithstanding the above effects of decreased soil disturbance by CA on the weed seedbank, there have been no comparable studies in the intensive, triple-cropping systems, where there is an annual period of soil submergence for wetland rice crops

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