Cargando…

Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains

In South Asia's rice-based cropping systems, most farmers flood and repetitively till their fields before transplanting. This establishment method, commonly termed puddled transplanted rice (TPR), is costly. In addition, it is labor and energy intensive. To increase labor and energy efficiency...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hossain, Khaled, Timsina, Jagadish, Johnson, David E., Gathala, Mahesh K., Krupnik, Timothy J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Butterworth 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7607608/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33273751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cropro.2020.105334
_version_ 1783604674529591296
author Hossain, Khaled
Timsina, Jagadish
Johnson, David E.
Gathala, Mahesh K.
Krupnik, Timothy J.
author_facet Hossain, Khaled
Timsina, Jagadish
Johnson, David E.
Gathala, Mahesh K.
Krupnik, Timothy J.
author_sort Hossain, Khaled
collection PubMed
description In South Asia's rice-based cropping systems, most farmers flood and repetitively till their fields before transplanting. This establishment method, commonly termed puddled transplanted rice (TPR), is costly. In addition, it is labor and energy intensive. To increase labor and energy efficiency in rice production, reduced or zero-tilled direct seeded rice (ZT-DSR) is commonly proposed as an alternative tillage and crop establishment (TCE) option. Effective management of weeds in ZT-DSR however remains a major challenge. We conducted a four-year experiment under a rice-maize rotation in Northwestern Bangladesh in the eastern Gangetic Plains to examine the performance of two TCE methods and three weed management regimes (WMR) on the diversity and competitiveness of weed communities in the rice phase of the rotation. The Shannon-Weiner Diversity Index, a measure of species diversity, was significantly greater under ZT-DSR than puddled TPR. It was also greater under no weed control (Weedy) and two manual weeding (MW) treatments compared to chemical herbicide with manual weeding (C + MW). In DSR Weedy plots, weed communities began shifting from grasses to sedges from the rotation's second year, while in the ZT-DSR and C + MW treatments, sedges were consistently predominant. In both puddled TPR Weedy and TPR C + MW treatments, broadleaves and grasses were dominant in the initial year, while sedges dominated in the final year. There were significant main effects of year (Y) and weed management regime (WMR), but not of TCE. Significant Y × TCE and TCE × WMR interaction effects on rice yield were also observed. Grain yields under ZT-DSR were similar to puddled TPR. ZT-DSR with one application of pre-emergence herbicide followed by one hand weeding at 28 days after establishment however resulted in significantly higher grain yield (5.34 t ha(−1)) compared the other weed management regimes. Future research should address methods to effectively manage weed community composition shifts in both ZT-DSR and TPR under rice-maize rotations utilizing integrated and low-cost strategies that can be readily applied by farmers in the eastern Gangetic Plains.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7607608
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Butterworth
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-76076082020-12-01 Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains Hossain, Khaled Timsina, Jagadish Johnson, David E. Gathala, Mahesh K. Krupnik, Timothy J. Crop Prot Article In South Asia's rice-based cropping systems, most farmers flood and repetitively till their fields before transplanting. This establishment method, commonly termed puddled transplanted rice (TPR), is costly. In addition, it is labor and energy intensive. To increase labor and energy efficiency in rice production, reduced or zero-tilled direct seeded rice (ZT-DSR) is commonly proposed as an alternative tillage and crop establishment (TCE) option. Effective management of weeds in ZT-DSR however remains a major challenge. We conducted a four-year experiment under a rice-maize rotation in Northwestern Bangladesh in the eastern Gangetic Plains to examine the performance of two TCE methods and three weed management regimes (WMR) on the diversity and competitiveness of weed communities in the rice phase of the rotation. The Shannon-Weiner Diversity Index, a measure of species diversity, was significantly greater under ZT-DSR than puddled TPR. It was also greater under no weed control (Weedy) and two manual weeding (MW) treatments compared to chemical herbicide with manual weeding (C + MW). In DSR Weedy plots, weed communities began shifting from grasses to sedges from the rotation's second year, while in the ZT-DSR and C + MW treatments, sedges were consistently predominant. In both puddled TPR Weedy and TPR C + MW treatments, broadleaves and grasses were dominant in the initial year, while sedges dominated in the final year. There were significant main effects of year (Y) and weed management regime (WMR), but not of TCE. Significant Y × TCE and TCE × WMR interaction effects on rice yield were also observed. Grain yields under ZT-DSR were similar to puddled TPR. ZT-DSR with one application of pre-emergence herbicide followed by one hand weeding at 28 days after establishment however resulted in significantly higher grain yield (5.34 t ha(−1)) compared the other weed management regimes. Future research should address methods to effectively manage weed community composition shifts in both ZT-DSR and TPR under rice-maize rotations utilizing integrated and low-cost strategies that can be readily applied by farmers in the eastern Gangetic Plains. Butterworth 2020-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7607608/ /pubmed/33273751 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cropro.2020.105334 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hossain, Khaled
Timsina, Jagadish
Johnson, David E.
Gathala, Mahesh K.
Krupnik, Timothy J.
Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains
title Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains
title_full Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains
title_fullStr Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains
title_full_unstemmed Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains
title_short Multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: Implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern Gangetic plains
title_sort multi-year weed community dynamics and rice yields as influenced by tillage, crop establishment, and weed control: implications for rice-maize rotations in the eastern gangetic plains
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7607608/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33273751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cropro.2020.105334
work_keys_str_mv AT hossainkhaled multiyearweedcommunitydynamicsandriceyieldsasinfluencedbytillagecropestablishmentandweedcontrolimplicationsforricemaizerotationsintheeasterngangeticplains
AT timsinajagadish multiyearweedcommunitydynamicsandriceyieldsasinfluencedbytillagecropestablishmentandweedcontrolimplicationsforricemaizerotationsintheeasterngangeticplains
AT johnsondavide multiyearweedcommunitydynamicsandriceyieldsasinfluencedbytillagecropestablishmentandweedcontrolimplicationsforricemaizerotationsintheeasterngangeticplains
AT gathalamaheshk multiyearweedcommunitydynamicsandriceyieldsasinfluencedbytillagecropestablishmentandweedcontrolimplicationsforricemaizerotationsintheeasterngangeticplains
AT krupniktimothyj multiyearweedcommunitydynamicsandriceyieldsasinfluencedbytillagecropestablishmentandweedcontrolimplicationsforricemaizerotationsintheeasterngangeticplains