Plants (Nov 2020)

Long-Term Effect of Cover Crops on Species Abundance and Diversity of Weed Flora

  • Alessia Restuccia,
  • Aurelio Scavo,
  • Sara Lombardo,
  • Gaetano Pandino,
  • Stefania Fontanazza,
  • Umberto Anastasi,
  • Cristina Abbate,
  • Giovanni Mauromicale

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants9111506
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 1506

Abstract

Read online

Cover crops are gaining in popularity as an eco-friendly tool for weed control in organic and low-input agricultural systems. A 5-year study was carried out in a Mediterranean environment (Sicily, south Italy) to (1) quantify cover crop biomass production and (2) evaluate the effects on weed soil seed bank, aboveground biomass, species richness, species composition and associations between communities. Cover crop treatments included subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L.) and spontaneous flora, both with and without burying dead mulch into the soil, compared to a conventional management treatment. Weed biomass was significantly reduced by subterranean clover, contrariwise to spontaneous flora, with season-dependent results. Cover crop biomass, which ranged from 44 to more than 290 g DW m−2, was negatively correlated to weed biomass. Moreover, subterranean clover decreased the size of the soil seed bank and species richness. Based on relative frequency, a low similarity was found between the conventional management and cover crop treatments. In addition, no significant differences in species composition across treatments were observed, whereas principal component analysis highlighted some associations. The results suggest that subterranean clover cover cropping is a good option for weed management in Mediterranean agroecosystems.

Keywords