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Effects of different fertilization regimes on weed communities in wheat fields under rice-wheat cropping system.

YUAN Fang1, LI Yong2, LI Fen-hua1, SUN Guo-jun1,3*, HAN Min1, ZHANG Hai-yan1, JI Zhong4, WU Chen-yu1   

  1. (1Plant Protection and Quarantine Station in Jintan District of Changzhou, Jintan 213200, Jiangsu, China; 2Soil and Fertilizer Technology Guidance Station in Jintan District of Changzhou, Jintan 213200, Jiangsu, China; 3School of Horticulture and Plant Protection, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou 225009, Jiangsu, China; 4Seed Management Station in Jintan District of Changzhou, Jintan 213200, Jiangsu, China).
  • Online:2016-01-18 Published:2016-01-18

Abstract: To reveal the effects of different fertilization regimes on weed communities in wheat fields under a rice-wheat rotation system, a survey was conducted before wheat harvest in 2014 after a 4-year- long-term recurrent fertilization scheme. Weed species types, density, height and diversity index under different fertilization and strawreturning schemes in wheat fields were studied and complemented with a canonical correspondence analysis on weed community distribution and soil nutrient factors. Twenty weed species were recorded among 36 wheat fields belonging to 19 genera and 11 families. Beckmannia syzigachne, Hemistepta lyrata, Malachium aquaticum and Cnidium monnieri were widely distributed throughout the sampled area. Long-term fertilization appeared to reduce weed species richness and density, particularly for broadleaf weeds, but increased weed height. Diversity and evenness indices of weed communities were lower and dominance indices were higher in fields where chemical fertilizers were applied alone or combined with organic fertilizers, especially, where organic-inorganic compound fertilizer was used, in which it readily caused the outbreak of a dominant species and severe damage. Conversely, diversity and evenness indices of weed communities were higher and dominance indices were lower when the straw was returned to the field combined with chemical or organic fertilizers, in which weed community structures were complex and stable with lower weed density. Under these conditions weeds only caused slight reduction of wheat growth.