Weed suppression greatly increased by plant diversity in intensively managed grasslands : a continental-scale experiment

Autor/a

Connolly, John

Sebastià, Ma.T

Kirwan, Laura

Finn, John Anthony

Llurba, Rosa

Suter, Matthias

Collins, Rosemary P.

Porqueddu, Claudio

Helgadóttir, Áslaug

Baadshaug, Ole H.

Bélanger, Gilles

Black, Alistair

Brophy, Caroline

Čop, Jure

Dalmannsdóttir, Sigridur

Delgado Enguita, Ignacio

Elgersma, Anjo

Fothergill, Michael

Frankow Lindberg, Bodil E.

Ghesquiere, An

Golinski, Piotr

Grieu, Philippe

Gustavsson, Anne-Maj

Höglind, Mats

Huguenin Elie, Olivier

Jørgensen, Marit

Kadziuliene, Zydre

Lunnan, Tor

Nykanen Kurki, Paivi

Ribas Artola, Àngela

Taube, Friedhelm

Thumm, Ulrich

Vliegher, Alex De

Lüscher, Andreas

Fecha de publicación

2018

Resumen

1. Grassland diversity can support sustainable intensification of grassland production through increased yields, reduced inputs and limited weed invasion. We report the effects of diversity on weed suppression from 3 years of a 31-site continental-scale field experiment. 2. At each site, 15 grassland communities comprising four monocultures and 11 four-species mixtures based on a wide range of species' proportions were sown at two densities and managed by cutting. Forage species were selected according to two crossed functional traits, "method of nitrogen acquisition" and "pattern of temporal development". 3. Across sites, years and sown densities, annual weed biomass in mixtures and monocultures was 0.5 and 2.0 t DM ha-1 (7% and 33% of total biomass respectively). Over 95% of mixtures had weed biomass lower than the average of monocultures, and in two-thirds of cases, lower than in the most suppressive monoculture (transgressive suppression). Suppression was significantly transgressive for 58% of site-years. Transgressive suppression by mixtures was maintained across years, independent of site productivity. 4. Based on models, average weed biomass in mixture over the whole experiment was 52% less (95% confidence interval: 30%-75%) than in the most suppressive monoculture. Transgressive suppression of weed biomass was significant at each year across all mixtures and for each mixture. 5. Weed biomass was consistently low across all mixtures and years and was in some cases significantly but not largely different from that in the equiproportional mixture. The average variability (standard deviation) of annual weed biomass within a site was much lower for mixtures (0.42) than for monocultures (1.77). 6. Synthesis and applications. Weed invasion can be diminished through a combination of forage species selected for complementarity and persistence traits in systems designed to reduce reliance on fertiliser nitrogen. In this study, effects of diversity on weed suppression were consistently strong across mixtures varying widely in species' proportions and over time. The level of weed biomass did not vary greatly across mixtures varying widely in proportions of sown species. These diversity benefits in intensively managed grasslands are relevant for the sustainable intensification of agriculture and, importantly, are achievable through practical farm-scale actions.

Tipo de documento

Article

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Agro-ecology; Evenness; Forage swards; Functional diversity; Generalised diversity-interactions; Legume-grass; Nitrogen acquisition; Sustainable agriculture; Temporal development; Transgressive; Weed suppression

Publicado por

 

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Derechos

open access

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