학술논문

Relationship between speed, soil movement into the cereal row and intra-row weed control efficacy by weed harrowing.
Document Type
Article
Source
Weed Research. Aug2003, Vol. 43 Issue 4, p285-296. 12p.
Subject
*WEED control
*AGRICULTURAL equipment
Language
ISSN
0043-1737
Abstract
Summary Field trials were carried out at a single Danish and two Spanish locations. In Denmark, winter wheat was sown at 24-cm row spacing allowing hoeing in the inter-row area. Hoeing speeds of 2, 5 and 8 km h-1 were tested at the end of tillering, at the beginning of stem elongation or on both occasions. The crop was harrowed immediately after hoeing at the same speed. At the Spanish locations the winter barley was sown at a 12-cm row spacing and harrowed only, at either pre-emergence plus post-emergence, or once post-emergence at mid-tillering at 2, 4, 6 and 8 km h-1 . The depth of the soil layer thrown into the cereal row was measured at all locations. This layer ranged between 0.4 and 1.4 cm, depending on the site and on the treatment, but was generally higher following a single harrow treatment at all sites. The soil layer only tended to increase with faster speeds at the Danish location. On a more sandy soil and soil rolled prior to treatment, less soil was thrown into the cereal row. When two hoe + harrowing treatments were made, a finer soil structure was achieved. However, this did not affect the weed control. At the Danish location, initial intra-row weeding efficacy of Brassica napus , based on plant number before and 7 days after treatment, was found to be low (21–41%) but increased to 74–79% when assessed after 45 days. Partial burial and bending of B. napus , together with crop competition, probably suppressed weed growth and enhanced final mortality. Uprooting was probably a more important cause of mortality for Stellaria media . At the Spanish locations, weeding efficacy of Papaver rhoeas was similar, ranging between 58% and 83% and this was achieved soon after harrowing. A thicker soil layer did not result in a greater weed kill. It was therefore suggested that burial alone could not be the main factor responsible for weed control in any of the cases studied. No reduction in wheat biomass, measured at the end... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]