2010
DOI: 10.1614/wt-09-020.1
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Effect of Biodegradable Mulch Materials on Weed Control in Processing Tomatoes

Abstract: 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 laborato… Show more

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Cited by 100 publications
(89 citation statements)
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“…Weeds were tested in each treatment 63 days after transplanting. For these measurements, four 1 m × 0.2 m frames, 10 cm apart from the tomato row, were defined on each bed treatment (Anzalone et al, 2010). The number of weeds was counted, and the weed soil cover was measured by image processing of digital photographs of the mulch surface and then expressed as a percentage.…”
Section: Trial Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Weeds were tested in each treatment 63 days after transplanting. For these measurements, four 1 m × 0.2 m frames, 10 cm apart from the tomato row, were defined on each bed treatment (Anzalone et al, 2010). The number of weeds was counted, and the weed soil cover was measured by image processing of digital photographs of the mulch surface and then expressed as a percentage.…”
Section: Trial Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An alternative environmentally friendly technique, suggested for many row crops even under organic cropping conditions (Anzalone, et al 2010;Cirujeda et al 2012;Rasmussen et al 2011), is mulching. A few experiments on mulching have been conducted on medicinal and aromatic plants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Polyethylene mulch remains practically intact and has to be removed at the end of the crop cycle because it is not biodegradable (Martin-Closas et al, 2008a,b;Anzalone et al, 2010). Biodegradable plastic mulch made out of starch has led to high tomato yields and degrades into nontoxic compounds (Cirujeda et al, 2012b;Miles et al, 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Biodegradable plastic mulch made out of starch has led to high tomato yields and degrades into nontoxic compounds (Cirujeda et al, 2012b;Miles et al, 2012). The main disadvantage of biodegradable plastic mulch is the high cost (varying from €700 ha -1 to €900 ha -1 ) (Novamont, 2012) with respect to other mulching materials such as straw (Anzalone et al, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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