Journal of Plant Protection Research (Dec 2021)

Germination biology and phenological development stages of false jagged-chickweed (Lepyrodiclis holosteoides)

  • Mehdi Minbashi Moeini,
  • Eshagh Keshtkar,
  • Hamidreza Sasanfar,
  • Mohammad Ali Baghestani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24425/jppr.2021.139243
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61, no. 4
pp. 347 – 357

Abstract

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False jagged-chickweed (Lepyrodiclis holosteoides (C.A. Mey.) Fenzl ex Fisch. & C.A. Mey.) is an invasive weed species distributed in many regions of Iran. Scientific knowledge about the biology and ecology of false jagged-chickweed is rare. In a series of laboratory experi- ments, the effect of chilling treatments, potassium nitrate (KNO3), gibberellic acid (GA3), concentrations, temperature regimes, and sowing depths on seed germination and breaking seed dormancy of false jagged-chickweed was studied. In two field experiments the phenol- ogy of false jagged-chickweed and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum) was also compared. Chilling treatment for 15 days, a KNO3 concentration of 30 μmolar and a GA3 concentra- tion of 144 μmolar increased germination percentage and germination rate. However, chill- ing treatment for 15 days did not increase germination rate as well as the KNO3 and GA3 treatments. A quadratic polynomial model predicted that the optimum temperature giving the maximum germination percentage was 22°C. Seedlings emerged in a range of sowing depths from 0 to 8 cm, while no seedling emergence occurred at sowing depths greater than 10 cm. Based on a Gaussian model, the optimum sowing depth was predicted to be 3.9 cm. False jagged-chickweed required higher growing degree days (GDD) for seedling emergence than winter wheat, while the flowering stage of false jagged-chickweed occurred earlier than winter wheat. Results achieved in the present study are of interest not only for studying other life cycle aspects of this species but also as basic information for developing management strategies.

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