Abstract

A phytosociological survey of weed species was conducted during the rainy season in 2008 in paddy fields at different distances from the main irrigation canal in the Kamping Puoy Irrigation Rehabilitation Area in northwestern Cambodia. The spatial variation in water depth was large between upstream (shallower) and downstream (deeper) paddies, which resulted in different weed, with many Poaceae and Cyperaceae species observed on levees in upstream and aquatic herbs in downstream paddies. Chemical fertilizer input levels were generally small and average rice yield was relatively low (ca. 2.3t/ha). Traditional and less intensive weed management options such as hand weeding, mid-season tillage, and post-harvest straw burning were common, while the herbicide 2,4-D was also widely used. Weed species in the paddy ecosystem used by villagers included Ipomoea aquatica, Nymphaea nouchali, and Monochoria vaginalis (occasional, for human consumption) and graminoid species (frequent, for cattle feed in addition to rice straw). Greater inorganic fertilizer input was associated with a lower diversity of weed species, but grain yield and weed diversity indices had no negative relation among different locations. This survey revealed relatively small extent of intensification in the irrigation rehabilitation area in Cambodia, which led to high weed diversity, including numerous plant species available for use to support farmers’ livelihoods in the area.

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