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Implications of delayed Echinochloa spp. germination and duration of competition for integrated weed management in water-seeded rice
Authors:K D Gibson  A J Fischer†  T C Foin‡  & J E Hill‡
Institution:Botany and Plant Pathology Department, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA,;Vegetable Crops Department, University of California, Davis, California, USA, and;Agronomy and Range Science Department, University of California, Davis, California, USA
Abstract:Summary Co-ordinating herbicide applications with the suppressive ability of the crop has the potential to improve weed control and optimize herbicide use in water-seeded rice. However, the successful integration of herbicide applications and crop development depends on the timing and duration of competition between rice and weeds. The critical period of competition between rice and Echinochloa species was examined in field and glasshouse experiments from 1996 to 2000. In 1999 and 2000, Echinochloa species seeded 30 days after rice in field experiments did not survive and rice yields were not reduced when plots were kept weed-free for 30 days or longer. In a basin experiment conducted in 1998, E. phyllopogon seeded with the crop was unaffected by light competition alone but the relative importance of shading by the crop increased when E. phyllopogon was seeded after rice. Management strategies that delay the germination or growth of Echinochloa species might confer a competitive advantage to rice and reduce the need for herbicide applications. However, yields in the field experiments were reduced by at least 18% after only 30 days of competition in both years, suggesting that it may be difficult to integrate currently available herbicides with crop growth in water-seeded rice.
Keywords:Echinochloa phyllopogon                        Echinochloa oryzoides            critical period of competition  competitive mechanisms
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