Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-07T04:24:01.077Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Growth, Development, and Seed Biology of Feather Fingergrass (Chloris virgata) in Southern Australia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2017

The D. Ngo*
Affiliation:
Postgraduate Student, Postdoctoral Fellow, Associate Professor, and Associate Professor, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, University of Adelaide, PMB 1, Glen Osmond, South Australia, 5064
Peter Boutsalis
Affiliation:
Postgraduate Student, Postdoctoral Fellow, Associate Professor, and Associate Professor, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, University of Adelaide, PMB 1, Glen Osmond, South Australia, 5064
Christopher Preston
Affiliation:
Postgraduate Student, Postdoctoral Fellow, Associate Professor, and Associate Professor, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, University of Adelaide, PMB 1, Glen Osmond, South Australia, 5064
Gurjeet Gill
Affiliation:
Postgraduate Student, Postdoctoral Fellow, Associate Professor, and Associate Professor, School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, University of Adelaide, PMB 1, Glen Osmond, South Australia, 5064
*
*Corresponding author’s E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Feather fingergrass is a major weed in agricultural systems in northern Australia and has now spread to southern Australia. To better understand the biology of this emerging weed species, its growth, development, and seed biology were examined. Under field conditions in South Australia, seedlings that emerged after summer rainfall events required 1,200 growing degree days from emergence to mature seed production and produced 700 g m−2 shoot biomass. Plants produced up to 1,000 seeds panicle−1 and more than 40,000 seeds plant−1, with seed weight ranging from 0.36 to 0.46 mg. Harvested seeds were dormant for a period of about 2 mo and required 5 mo of after-ripening to reach 50% germination. Freshly harvested seed could be released from dormancy by pretreatment with 564 mM sodium hypochlorite for 30 min. Light significantly increased germination. Seed could germinate over a wide temperature range (10 to 40 C), with maximum germination at 15 to 25 C. At 20 to 25 C, 50% germination was reached within 2.7 to 3.3 d, and the predicted base temperature to germinate was 2.1 to 3.0 C. The osmotic potential and NaCl concentration required to inhibit germination by 50% were −0.16 to −0.20 MPa and 90 to 124 mM, respectively. Seedling emergence was highest (76%) for seeds present on soil surface and was significantly reduced by burial at 1 (57%), 2 (49%), and 5 cm (9%). Under field conditions, seeds buried in the soil persisted longer than those left on the soil surface, and low spring–summer rainfall increased seed persistence. This study provides important information on growth, development, and seed biology of feather fingergrass that will contribute to the development of a more effective management program for this weed species in Australia.

Type
Weed Biology and Ecology
Copyright
© Weed Science Society of America, 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Associate Editor for this paper: Carlene Chase, University of Florida

References

Literature Cited

Adkins, S, Bellairs, S, Loch, D (2002) Seed dormancy mechanisms in warm season grass species. Euphytica 126:1320 Google Scholar
Anderson, DE (1974) Taxonomy of the Genus Chloris (Gramineae). Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Science Bulletin. 133 pGoogle Scholar
Baskin, CC, Baskin, JM (1998) Seeds: Ecology, Biogeography, and Evolution of Dormancy and Germination. 2nd ed. Tokyo: Elsevier. 666 pGoogle Scholar
Batlla, D, Benech‐Arnold, RL (2014) Weed seed germination and the light environment: implications for weed management. Weed Biol Manage 14:7787 Google Scholar
Bhatt, A, Phondani, PC, Pompelli, MF (2016) Seed maturation time influences the germination requirements of perennial grasses in desert climate of Arabian Gulf. Saudi J Biol Sci: in pressGoogle Scholar
Bhowmik, PC (1997) Weed biology: importance to weed management. Weed Sci 45:349356 Google Scholar
Blum, A (1996) Crop responses to drought and the interpretation of adaptation. Plant Growth Regul 20:135148 Google Scholar
Borger, CPD, Riethmuller, GP, Hashem, A (2011) Emergence, survival, biomass production, and seed production of Chloris truncata (windmill grass) in the Western Australian wheatbelt. Crop Pasture Sci 62:678685 Google Scholar
Chachalis, D, Reddy, KN (2000) Factors affecting Campsis radicans seed germination and seedling emergence. Weed Sci 48:212216 Google Scholar
Chauhan, BS, Gill, G, Preston, C (2006) Influence of environmental factors on seed germination and seedling emergence of rigid ryegrass (Lolium rigidum). Weed Sci 54:10041012 Google Scholar
Cousens, R, Mortimer, M (1995) Dynamics of Weed Populations. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Pp. 332 Google Scholar
Donatelli, M, Hammer, GL, Vanderlip, RL (1992) Genotype and Water Limitation Effects on Phenology, Growth, and Transpiration Efficiency in Grain Sorghum. Crop Sci 32:781786 Google Scholar
Farley, GJ, Bellairs, SM, Adkins, SW (2013) Germination of selected Australian native grass species, with potential for minesite rehabilitation. Aust J Bot 61:283290 Google Scholar
Fernando, N, Humphries, T, Florentine, SK, Chauhan, BS (2016) Factors affecting seed germination of feather fingergrass (Chloris virgata). Weed Sci 64:605612 Google Scholar
Grime, J, Mason, G, Curtis, A, Rodman, J, Band, S (1981) A comparative study of germination characteristics in a local flora. J Ecol 69:10171059 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hsiao, A (1979) The effect of sodium hypochlorite and gibberellic acid on seed dormancy and germination of wild oats (Avena fatua). Can J Bot 57:17291734 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hsiao, A (1980) The effect of sodium hypochlorite, gibberellic acid and light on seed dormancy and germination of stinkweed and wild mustard. Can J Plant Sci 60:643649 Google Scholar
Hsiao, AI, Quick, WA (1984) Actions of sodium hypochlorite and hydrogen peroxide on seed dormancy and germination of wild oats, Avena fatua L. Weed Res 24:411419 Google Scholar
Kleemann, SGL, Preston, C, Gill, GS (2016) Influence of management on long-term seedbank dynamics of rigid ryegrass (Lolium rigidum) in cropping systems of southern Australia. Weed Sci 64:303311 Google Scholar
Koger, CH, Reddy, KN, Poston, DH (2004) Factors affecting seed germination, seedling emergence, and survival of texasweed (Caperonia palustris). Weed Sci 52:989995 Google Scholar
Li, X, Li, XL, Jiang, DM, Liu, ZM (2006) Germination strategies and patterns of annual species in the temperate semiarid region of China. Arid Land Res Manage 20:195207 Google Scholar
Liu, Z, Li, X, Li, R, Jiang, D, Cao, C (2003) A comparative study on seed germination of 15 grass species in Keeqin Sandyland. Yingyong Shengtai Xuebao 14:14161420 Google Scholar
Llewellyn, R, Ronning, D, Ouzman, J, Walker, S, Mayfield, A, Clarke, M (2016) Impact of Weeds on Australian Grain Production: The Cost of Weeds to Australian Grain Growers and the Adoption of Weed Management and Tillage Practices. Kingston, Australia: Grains Research and Development Corporation. 112 pGoogle Scholar
Loch, DS, Adkins, SW, Heslehurst, MR, Paterson, MF, Bellairs, SM (2004) Seed formation, development, and germination. Pages 95143 in Moser LE, Burson BL, Sollenberger LE, eds, Warm-Season (C4) Grasses. Madison, WI: American Society of Agronomy Google Scholar
Machado, ECR, Lima, RSO, Silva, APP, Marques, BS, Goncalves, MF, Carvalho, SJP (2014) Initial growth and development of southern sandbur based on thermal units. Planta Daninha 32:335343 Google Scholar
Masin, R, Zuin, MC, Archer, DW, Forcella, F, Zanin, G (2005) WeedTurf: a predictive model to aid control of annual summer weeds in turf. Weed Sci 53:193201 Google Scholar
Matthews, J (1994) Management of herbicide resistant weed populations. Pages 317335 in Powles S, Holtum J, eds, Herbicide Resistance in Plants: Biology and Biochemistry. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Google Scholar
McLean, AR, Keenan, MD, Widderick, MJ (2014) Non-chemical control of Chloris virgata (feathertop Rhodes grass). Hobart, Tasmania: Tasmanian Weed Society. 427 pGoogle Scholar
Mennan, H, Ngouajio, M (2006) Seasonal cycles in germination and seedling emergence of summer and winter populations of catchweed bedstraw (Galium aparine) and wild mustard (Brassica kaber). Weed Sci 54:114120 Google Scholar
Michel, BE (1983) Evaluation of the water potentials of solutions of polyethylene glycol 8000 both in the absence and presence of other solutes. Plant Physiol 72:6670 Google Scholar
Milberg, P, Andersson, L, Thompson, K (2000) Large-seeded spices are less dependent on light for germination than small-seeded ones. Seed Sci Res 10:99104 Google Scholar
Moles, AT, Westoby, M (2004) What do seedlings die from and what are the implications for evolution of seed size? Oikos 106:193199 Google Scholar
Osten, V (2012) Feathertop Rhodes Grass: A Best Weed Management Guide. Queensland, Australia: Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry. 12 pGoogle Scholar
Osten, V, Hashem, A, Koetz, E, Lemerle, D, Pathan, S, Wright, G (2006) Impacts of Summer Fallow Weeds on Soil Nitrogen and Wheat in the Southern, Western and Northern Australian Grain Regions. Adelaide, SA, Australia: Weed Management Society of SA. Pp 395398 Google Scholar
Saatkamp, A, Affre, L, Dutoit, T, Poschlod, P (2009) The seed bank longevity index revisited: limited reliability evident from a burial experiment and database analyses. Ann Bot 104:715724 Google Scholar
Schutte, B, Tomasek, B, Davis, A, Andersson, L, Benoit, D, Cirujeda, A, Dekker, J, Forcella, F, Gonzalez‐Andujar, J, Graziani, F (2014) An investigation to enhance understanding of the stimulation of weed seedling emergence by soil disturbance. Weed Res 54:112 Google Scholar
Simpson, GM (1990) The occurrence of dormancy in the Gramineae. Pages 3--59 in Seed Dormancy in Grasses [electronic resource]. New York: Cambridge University Press Google Scholar
Steinmaus, SJ, Prather, TS, Holt, JS (2000) Estimation of base temperatures for nine weed species. J Exp Bot 51:275286 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weller, DE (1987) A reevaluation of the −3/2 power rule of plant self-thinning. Ecol Monogr 57:2343 Google Scholar
Werth, J, Boucher, L, Thornby, D, Walker, S, Charles, G (2013) Changes in weed species since the introduction of glyphosate-resistant cotton. Crop Pasture Sci 64:791798 Google Scholar
Widderick, M, Cook, T, McLean, A, Churchett, J, Keenan, M, Miller, B, Davidson, B (2014) Improved Management of Key Northern Region Weeds: Diverse Problems, Diverse Solutions. Hobart, Tasmania, Australia: Tasmanian Weed Society. Pp 312315 Google Scholar
Yoda, K, Kira, T, Ogawa, H (1963) Intra-specific competition among higher plants. IX. Self-thinning in overcrowded pure stands under cultivation and natural conditions. J Biol Osaka City University 14:107129 Google Scholar
Zelaya, IA, Owen, MD, Pitty, A (1997) Germination characteristics of eight weed species from the dry tropics. Ceiba 38:137149 Google Scholar
Zhang, H, Irving, LJ, Tian, Y, Zhou, D (2012) Influence of salinity and temperature on seed germination rate and the hydrotime model parameters for the halophyte, Chloris virgata, and the glycophyte, Digitaria sanguinalis . S Afr J Bot 78:203210 Google Scholar
Zhang, H, Tian, Y, Zhou, D (2015) A modified thermal time model quantifying germination response to temperature for C3 and C4 species in temperate grassland. Agriculture 5:412 Google Scholar