Three years of field trials have been carried out in Zaragoza, Spain, using different biodegradable mulch materials in processing tomatoes. The aim was to evaluate weed control with several biodegradable mulches as alternatives to black polyethylene (PE) mulch. The treatments were rice straw, barley straw, maize harvest residue, absinth wormwood plants, black biodegradable plastic, brown kraft paper, PE, herbicide, manual weeding, and unweeded control. Assessments focused on weeds and on crop yield. A laboratory study showed that 1 kg/m2of organic mulch was sufficient to cover the soil for rice, barley straw, and maize harvest residue. The most abundant weed species in the field were purple nutsedge, common purslane, common lambsquarters, and large crabgrass and a change in weed composition was observed between treatments and years. Most weed species were controlled by the mulching materials except that purple nutsedge was controlled only by paper mulch. The other species were well controlled by PE and biodegradable plastic and also by some of the organic mulch treatments. Best weed control and lowest weed biomass were achieved by paper followed by PE and biodegradable plastic. The best organic mulch was rice straw and the worst weed control was from absinth wormwood. Tomato yield was highest for PE followed by paper, manual weeding, biodegradable plastic, and rice straw and was clearly related to weed control. Paper, biodegradable plastic, and rice straw are potential substitutes for PE and herbicides.
Management practices, geographical gradients and climatic factors are factors explaining weed species composition and richness in cereal fields from Northern and Central Europe. In the Mediterranean area, the precise factors responsible for weed distribution are less known due to the lack of data and surveys. The existence of weed survey data of year 1976 in the Zaragoza province of the Aragón region, Spain, offered us the opportunity to compare present weed species with weed species growing 30 years ago. No detailed comparison of changes in weed species composition in cereal fields in that period of time has been conducted in the Mediterranean area. Here a survey was conducted in the Aragón region from 2005 to 2007. Weeds were surveyed in 138 winter cereal fields in ten survey areas where winter cereals are the main crops, using the same methodology applied 30 years ago. In the Zaragoza province, 36 fields were chosen in the same municipalities than in the previous survey. Several management, geographic and climatic variables of each field were recorded and related to weed species with multivariate analysis. Diversity index were calculated and related to survey area and altitude. Our results show that out of the 175 species only 26 species were found in more than 10% of the surveyed fields. The main species were Papaver rhoeas, Lolium rigidum, Avena sterilis and Convolvulus arvensis found in more than half of the surveyed fields. L. rigidum was related to dryland, while the other species were found overall. Furthermore, we found that management, geographical and climatic factors were significantly related to weed species distribution. In particular altitude, survey areas, irrigation and herbicide use in post-emergence were the most driving factors explaining weed species distribution. Species richness was higher in survey areas with extensive management practices and increased with altitude excepting a very productive area with intensive management practices at high altitude where richness was as low as in the irrigated lowlands. The main differences found between the 1976 and the 2005-2007 surveys were (1) the striking increase of grass weeds, (2) the high decrease of mean weed species number found in each field declining from 9 to 3 and (3) the frequency decrease of many weed species probably caused by agriculture intensification in that period of time. The growing importance of other weed species is probably related to their adaptation to minimum tillage, which is a widespread technique nowadays.
Five field experiments on barley and wheat have been carried out in North-Eastern Spain on the same field during the cropping seasons 1999-00 to 2003-04 to compare the effect of different harrowing adjustments on weed control, weed biomass and cereal yield. The variables considered were harrowing timing (pre-or early post-emergence), one or two passes, travelling direction, harrowing depth and speed compared with an untreated control and herbicide. Excepting year 2001, with very little weed emergence, mechanical control as a whole caused a significant weed plant reduction compared to the untreated plots in all years. No influence of harrowing depth and travelling speed and of pre-emergence harrowing were found in the trials. A single harrowing treatment conducted across the sowing direction gave the same or less control compared to harrowing along the sowing direction. Two harrowing passes achieved a higher efficacy than one single pass and little differences were detected if the second pass was conducted the same day, across the sowing direction or 15 days later. Despite herbicide had generally a higher efficacy than the harrowing treatments, in three out of five years it was found a mechanical control with the same control than herbicide. The effect of the different treatments on weed biomass was lower than on weed number and no significant differences were found for grain yield. Considering that an herbicide treatment in the present conditions is three times more expensive than harrowing, a single post-emergence harrowing can be considered a valid option for low and medium-infested cereal fields.Additional key words: barley, durum wheat, flex-tine harrow, mechanical weed control. Resumen Control mecánico de malas hierbas en cereal de invierno en condiciones semiáridasEn este trabajo se muestran los resultados de cinco experimentos de campo localizados en el noreste de España desde 1999-00 hasta 2003-04. En ellos se comparó el efecto de distintas formas de control mecánico de la flora arvense con grada de varillas flexibles sobre la densidad y biomasa de la misma y sobre la producción de cereal comparado con un control sin tratar y el uso de herbicidas. Las variables consideradas fueron: momento y número de pases de grada, profundidad, dirección y velocidad de los pases. Excepto en 2001, con una baja infestación, el control mecánico redujo la densidad de arvenses en comparación con las parcelas sin tratar. La profundidad y la velocidad de la labor no tuvieron influencia clara y realizar el pase en preemergencia del cereal resultó ineficaz probablemente debido a la falta de humedad. Dos pases resultaron más eficaces que uno y se encontraron pocas diferencias si el segundo se hacía en el mismo día, perpendicular o 15 días después. Aunque el herbicida tuvo generalmente mayor eficacia que los tratamientos mecánicos, en tres años se encontró un tratamiento mecánico con eficacia similar. El efecto de los distintos tratamientos sobre la biomasa de arvenses fue menor que sobre el número de las mismas y no hubo...
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