Abstract

Weed species within arable farming systems act as a source of food and provide habitat for various taxa at higher trophic levels. Using field experiments in winter wheat, we investigated whether selective herbicides can be used as a potential tool for sustaining beneficial, less competitive weed species and rare species of high conservation value while controlling highly competitive weed species. We tested three selective herbicides with different active ingredients (amidosulfuron + iodosulfuron, fluroxypyr, mecoprop-P) at two application rates. We analysed cover of selected focal species (Centaurea cyanus and Papaver rhoeas) as well as weed species richness, winter wheat yield and weed community composition as influenced by herbicide treatments. Herbicide treatments involving fluroxypyr generally allowed for the selective retention of the regionally threatened weed species C. cyanus and P. rhoeas as a beneficial species of high value for associated trophic level and provided considerable control of the competitive species G. aparine. Herbicide treatments significantly affected weed species composition. The PRC method clearly showed the time-dependent herbicide treatment effects on weed community composition and allowed an estimate of the variance in species composition that is explained by the herbicide treatments. Our results indicated that applying selective herbicides can provide a feasible option for in-crop management of weed diversity by retention of beneficial or rare weed species occurring at moderate densities and control of highly-competitive weeds. However, weed control strategies must be tailored to site-specific conditions to account for increased abundance of competitive species.

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