Plants (Nov 2020)

Growth and Phenology of <i>Vulpia Myuros</i> in Comparison with <i>Apera Spica-Venti</i>, <i>Alopecurus Myosuroides</i> and <i>Lolium Multiflorum</i> in Monoculture and in Winter Wheat

  • Muhammad Javaid Akhter,
  • Bo Melander,
  • Solvejg Kopp Mathiassen,
  • Rodrigo Labouriau,
  • Svend Vendelbo Nielsen,
  • Per Kudsk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants9111495
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 1495

Abstract

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Vulpia myuros has become an increasing weed problem in winter cereals in Northern Europe. However, the information about V. myuros and its behavior as an arable weed is limited. Field and greenhouse experiments were conducted in 2017/18 and 2018/19, at the Department of Agroecology in Flakkebjerg, Denmark to investigate the emergence, phenological development and growth characteristics of V. myuros in monoculture and in mixture with winter wheat, in comparison to Apera spica-venti, Alopecurus myosuroides and Lolium multiflorum. V. myuros emerged earlier than A. myosuroides and A. spica-venti but later than L. multiflorum. Significant differences in phenological development were recorded among the species. Overall phenology of V. myuros was more similar to that of L. multiflorum than to A. myosuroides and A. spica-venti. V. myuros started seed shedding earlier than A. spica-venti and L. multiflorum but later than A. myosuroides. V. myuros was more sensitive to winter wheat competition in terms of biomass production and fecundity than the other species. Using a target-neighborhood design, responses of V. myuros and A. spica-venti to the increasing density of winter wheat were quantified. At early growth stages “BBCH 26–29”, V. myuros was suppressed less than A. spica-venti by winter wheat, while opposite responses were seen at later growth stages “BBCH 39–47” and “BBCH 81–90”. No significant differences in fecundity characteristics were observed between the two species in response to increasing winter wheat density. The information on the behavior of V. myuros gathered by the current study can support the development of effective integrated weed management strategies for V. myuros.

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