SEED LONGEVITY OF 41 WEED SPECIES BURIED 17 YEARS IN EASTERN AND WESTERN NEBRASKA

Citation
Oc. Burnside et al., SEED LONGEVITY OF 41 WEED SPECIES BURIED 17 YEARS IN EASTERN AND WESTERN NEBRASKA, Weed science, 44(1), 1996, pp. 74-86
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences",Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
00431745
Volume
44
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
74 - 86
Database
ISI
SICI code
0043-1745(1996)44:1<74:SLO4WS>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
Seed of 41 economically important weed species of the Great Plains reg ion of the United States were buried 20 cm deep in soil in eastern and western Nebraska in 1976. The 41 species consisted of 11 annual grass , 14 annual broadleaf, 4 biennial broadleaf, and 12 perennial broadlea f species. Weed seeds were exhumed annually for germination tests the first 9 yr, then after 12 and 17 yr. Germination percentages at the tw o burial locations averaged over 0, 1 to 4, 5 to 8, and 9 to 17 yr of burial were 57, 28, 9, and 4% for annual grass; 47, 26, 16, and 11% fo r annual broadleaf; 52, 49, 44, and 30% for biennial broadleaf; 36, 18 , 13, and 8% for perennial broadleaf; and 47, 26, 16, and 10% for all 41 weed species, respectively. Biennial broadleaf weeds showed the gre atest seed germination over years. Annual grass weeds showed less seed germinability over 17 yr of burial than annual broadleaf weeds and pe rennial broadleaf weed species were intermediate. Weed seed germinabil ity in soil was greater in the reduced rainfall and more moderate soil temperatures of western Nebraska than in the greater rainfall and mor e fluctuating soil temperatures of eastern Nebraska. The greatest seed survival among the 41 weed species was shown by common mullein, which had 95% germination after 17 yr of burial in western Nebraska. Decay rates of individual weed species in soil will be of most value to weed scientists, agriculturalists, and modelers evaluating past or designi ng future weed management systems.