Publication | Open Access
Effect of fertilization patterns on the assemblage of weed communities in an upland winter wheat field
52
Citations
52
References
2013
Year
Weed CharacteristicsFarmland Weed CommunitiesCrop-weed InteractionCropping SystemsFertilization PatternsLand UseCropping SystemSustainable AgricultureCrop ProtectionAgricultural EconomicsSpecies DiversityFarming SystemsCrop RotationField CropAgroecological SystemsPublic HealthWeed ScienceWeed Communities
AimsUnderstanding the response of farmland weed community assembly to fertilization is important for designing better nutrient management strategies in integrated farmland ecological systems. Many studies have focused on weed characteristics, mainly crop–weed competition responses to fertilization or weed communities alone. However, weed community assembly in association with crop growth is poorly understood in the agroecosystems, but is important for the determination of integrated weed management. Biodiversity promotes ecosystem productivity in the grassland, but whether it applies to the agroecosystems is unclear. Based on an 11-year field experiment, the cumulative effects of different fertilization patterns on the floristic composition and species diversity of farmland weed communities along with wheat growth in a winter wheat–soybean rotation were investigated.
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