Author:
SHIELD I. F.,BACON E. T. G.
Abstract
Six management regimes for 1-year set-aside were compared with
continuous winter wheat for their
effects on weed control in two following test crops of winter wheat.
The experiment was repeated in
each of three years (1989–91) on predominantly sandy loam soils
in eastern England. The weed flora
was dominated by Poa spp., Stellaria media,
Matricaria spp., Chenopodium album and volunteer
crops, predominantly wheat.Managing set-aside by allowing natural regeneration and cutting it
2–4 times during the growing
season resulted in fewest weeds in the following wheat crop. It was
also a low cost option. Winter
wheat, despite the application of herbicides, was not as
effective in minimizing weeds in the winter
wheat test crops as the best set-aside options.An Italian ryegrass cover crop set seed despite being cut
2–4 times per year. The only serious weed
infestation arising in following wheat crops was from volunteer ryegrass
in the second wheat
following set-aside. The effects of management in the set-aside
year were generally greater in the
second of the following wheats than in the first.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
7 articles.
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