2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.fcr.2015.07.012
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Weed dynamics and conservation agriculture principles: A review

Abstract: a b s t r a c tConservation agriculture (CA) is based on minimum soil disturbance, permanent soil cover, and crop rotation; it is promoted as a sustainable alternative to systems involving conventional tillage. Adoption of CA changes weed dynamics and communities and therefore necessitates adjusting weed control methods. The objectives of this review are to summarize literature concerning CA principles and their interactive effects on weed life cycles and community composition, briefly review CA-appropriate cu… Show more

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Cited by 317 publications
(314 citation statements)
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“…[37]). Under conservation tillage, weed communities are richer in perennial species and volunteer crops, being more similar to those inhabiting grasslands, and are therefore more influenced by the immigration of seeds from semi-natural habitats [42]. Conventional tilled fields instead harboured mostly annual weed species typical of more disturbed environments.…”
Section: (A) Effects Of Soil Management On Ecosystem Service Provisionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[37]). Under conservation tillage, weed communities are richer in perennial species and volunteer crops, being more similar to those inhabiting grasslands, and are therefore more influenced by the immigration of seeds from semi-natural habitats [42]. Conventional tilled fields instead harboured mostly annual weed species typical of more disturbed environments.…”
Section: (A) Effects Of Soil Management On Ecosystem Service Provisionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A method of controlling the notoriously noxious weed of cereal crops-blackgrass (Alopecurus myosuroides Huds. )-with no-tillage practices is a good example [68,73]. Up to 80% of blackgrass seeds perish each year in undisturbed (i.e., direct-drilled) soil and so only 20% of the previous year's seed bank will germinate.…”
Section: Seed Decaymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• Seed predation in ecological weed management Surface accumulation of seeds under no-tillage should increase their susceptibility to predation by insects, rodents and birds [68]. This can be a useful avenue for ecological weed management [69].…”
Section: Reduced Weed Seed Bank In Ecological Weed Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Understanding allelopathy is helpful for planning and managing cropping systems (Gronle et al 2015). Reduced weed infestation in CA can be achieved with proper weed-suppressive cover crops (Altieri et al 2011;Jabran et al 2015;Nichols et al 2015), or via the use of allelopathic crop cultivars (Balbinot Junior et al 2003;Nichols et al 2015) or consortium systems that involve potential allelopathic species. Highly productive crop rotations should consider crop species that are tolerant to the allelochemicals released from previous crops.…”
Section: The Use Of Allelopathy In Cropping Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%