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the MOF&G Online |
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Cropping Systems Influence Biological Weed ControlBoosting organic matter in soil creates a healthy environment for soil-dwelling bacteria that suppress weeds, according to Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists. They report that to create ideal soil conditions, farmers should rotate their crops, reduce tillage and minimize herbicide applications. The beneficial microbes, called deleterious rhizobacteria (DRB), live on--or within millimeters of--weed roots, and they feed on substances that ooze from those roots. As the name DRB implies, these bacteria are bad for weeds. Although they suppress weed growth, DRB normally don't interfere with crop plant growth. Robert J. Kremer, a microbiologist with the ARS Cropping Systems and Water Quality Research Unit in Columbia, Missouri, says many DRB keep weed seeds from germinating and produce toxins and excessive concentrations of plant growth hormones that put the life processes of weed seedlings in "overdrive." Consequently, root cells may rupture and leak, replenishing the DRB diet. Once weakened by DRB, weeds are less able to compete with other plants, and they become more vulnerable to other control measures. Kremer and graduate student Jianmei Li researched cultures of DRB associated with the most dominant species of weeds in six cropping systems. In general, the highest numbers of weed-suppressing DRB came from fields where crops were rotated, chemicals and tillage were minimal, and organic materials such as composts were added. The DRB fared best in a corn-soybean-wheat-cover crop rotation. An organic strawberry system with compost was a close second. Source: ARS News Service, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, Ben Hardin; Scientific contact: Robert J. Kremer, ARS Cropping Systems and Water Quality Research Unit, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO., phone (573) 882-6408, fax (573) 884-5070, KremerR@missouri.edu. |