How Do Long Term Crop Rotations Influence Weed Populations: Exploring the Impacts of More than 50 Years of Crop Management in Serbia
Authors
Šaulić, MarkoOveisi, Mostafa
Đalović, Ivica
Božić, Dragana

Pishyar, Alireza
Savić, Aleksandra
Prasad, Vara
Vrbničanin, Sava
Article (Published version)
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Crop rotation is known as an eco-friendlier approach, as provides diversification in crop management systems, modifies intensive pressure on the agricultural ecosystem, utilizes various soil horizons, and prevents the establishment of specific pests and weeds. We set out here a study on the farms that have been managed over 50 years of specific continuous crop management programs. The experimental treatments were in a different management system: monoculture of maize, winter wheat, and soybean, 2-year crop rotation (winter wheat–maize) with and without chemical fertilizer, and 3-year crop rotation (winter wheat–soybean–maize) with and without chemical fertilizer and manure. We took soil samples six times from 2014 to 2017 prior to sowing and after harvesting each year. Weed seeds were extracted from soils and identified and counted by species. We, upon the data of a long term experiment of crop rotation, could conclude that crop rotations with more crops in the sequence are significant...ly effective in maintaining weed populations, a low-input crop production could reach a constant low population below an important damaging density, and therefore will be a more sustainable crop production while chemical fertilizers would change the soil’s chemical and structure and imbalance the plant population diversity and manures with high weed seed infestations have the potential to totally eradicate crop rotation effects, Therefore, clean manures or compost are highly recommended.
Keywords:
crop rotations / fertilizer / soil seed bank / manure / maize / soybean / wheatSource:
Agronomy-Basel, 2022, 12, 8, 1772-Publisher:
- MDPI
Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200032 (Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, Novi Sad) (RS-200032)
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200116 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Agriculture) (RS-200116)
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200010 (Institute for Plant Protection and Environment, Belgrade) (RS-200010)
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12081772
ISSN: 2073-4395
WoS: 00084625340000
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85137336367
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IZBISTY - JOUR AU - Šaulić, Marko AU - Oveisi, Mostafa AU - Đalović, Ivica AU - Božić, Dragana AU - Pishyar, Alireza AU - Savić, Aleksandra AU - Prasad, Vara AU - Vrbničanin, Sava PY - 2022 UR - https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/733 AB - Crop rotation is known as an eco-friendlier approach, as provides diversification in crop management systems, modifies intensive pressure on the agricultural ecosystem, utilizes various soil horizons, and prevents the establishment of specific pests and weeds. We set out here a study on the farms that have been managed over 50 years of specific continuous crop management programs. The experimental treatments were in a different management system: monoculture of maize, winter wheat, and soybean, 2-year crop rotation (winter wheat–maize) with and without chemical fertilizer, and 3-year crop rotation (winter wheat–soybean–maize) with and without chemical fertilizer and manure. We took soil samples six times from 2014 to 2017 prior to sowing and after harvesting each year. Weed seeds were extracted from soils and identified and counted by species. We, upon the data of a long term experiment of crop rotation, could conclude that crop rotations with more crops in the sequence are significantly effective in maintaining weed populations, a low-input crop production could reach a constant low population below an important damaging density, and therefore will be a more sustainable crop production while chemical fertilizers would change the soil’s chemical and structure and imbalance the plant population diversity and manures with high weed seed infestations have the potential to totally eradicate crop rotation effects, Therefore, clean manures or compost are highly recommended. PB - MDPI T2 - Agronomy-Basel T1 - How Do Long Term Crop Rotations Influence Weed Populations: Exploring the Impacts of More than 50 Years of Crop Management in Serbia IS - 8 SP - 1772 VL - 12 DO - 10.3390/agronomy12081772 ER -
@article{ author = "Šaulić, Marko and Oveisi, Mostafa and Đalović, Ivica and Božić, Dragana and Pishyar, Alireza and Savić, Aleksandra and Prasad, Vara and Vrbničanin, Sava", year = "2022", abstract = "Crop rotation is known as an eco-friendlier approach, as provides diversification in crop management systems, modifies intensive pressure on the agricultural ecosystem, utilizes various soil horizons, and prevents the establishment of specific pests and weeds. We set out here a study on the farms that have been managed over 50 years of specific continuous crop management programs. The experimental treatments were in a different management system: monoculture of maize, winter wheat, and soybean, 2-year crop rotation (winter wheat–maize) with and without chemical fertilizer, and 3-year crop rotation (winter wheat–soybean–maize) with and without chemical fertilizer and manure. We took soil samples six times from 2014 to 2017 prior to sowing and after harvesting each year. Weed seeds were extracted from soils and identified and counted by species. We, upon the data of a long term experiment of crop rotation, could conclude that crop rotations with more crops in the sequence are significantly effective in maintaining weed populations, a low-input crop production could reach a constant low population below an important damaging density, and therefore will be a more sustainable crop production while chemical fertilizers would change the soil’s chemical and structure and imbalance the plant population diversity and manures with high weed seed infestations have the potential to totally eradicate crop rotation effects, Therefore, clean manures or compost are highly recommended.", publisher = "MDPI", journal = "Agronomy-Basel", title = "How Do Long Term Crop Rotations Influence Weed Populations: Exploring the Impacts of More than 50 Years of Crop Management in Serbia", number = "8", pages = "1772", volume = "12", doi = "10.3390/agronomy12081772" }
Šaulić, M., Oveisi, M., Đalović, I., Božić, D., Pishyar, A., Savić, A., Prasad, V.,& Vrbničanin, S.. (2022). How Do Long Term Crop Rotations Influence Weed Populations: Exploring the Impacts of More than 50 Years of Crop Management in Serbia. in Agronomy-Basel MDPI., 12(8), 1772. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy12081772
Šaulić M, Oveisi M, Đalović I, Božić D, Pishyar A, Savić A, Prasad V, Vrbničanin S. How Do Long Term Crop Rotations Influence Weed Populations: Exploring the Impacts of More than 50 Years of Crop Management in Serbia. in Agronomy-Basel. 2022;12(8):1772. doi:10.3390/agronomy12081772 .
Šaulić, Marko, Oveisi, Mostafa, Đalović, Ivica, Božić, Dragana, Pishyar, Alireza, Savić, Aleksandra, Prasad, Vara, Vrbničanin, Sava, "How Do Long Term Crop Rotations Influence Weed Populations: Exploring the Impacts of More than 50 Years of Crop Management in Serbia" in Agronomy-Basel, 12, no. 8 (2022):1772, https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy12081772 . .