Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T20:03:11.716Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Utilizing Sorghum as a functional model of crop–weed competition. I. Establishing a competitive hierarchy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Melinda L. Hoffman
Affiliation:
Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824

Abstract

Application of nitrogen (N) fertilizer to sorghum at planting is a common practice that could confound competitive relationships of the crop with weeds. We studied the competitiveness of grain sorghum (Pioneer Brand 8333) relative to that of the annual weed shattercane and the perennial weed johnsongrass. The taxa are closely related, so survival requirements should be similar thus increasing the likelihood of finding differences associated with traits of the crop vs. weediness. Objectives of this research were to establish a competitive hierarchy for this crop–weed complex and to determine if relative competitiveness was affected by added N. A replacement design experiment was used in which plants were grown for 31 d in soil-filled pots placed outdoors. Taxa were planted in monocultures and 50:50 mixtures, representing all possible combinations of taxa, at a total density of 16 plants pot−1. Soil moisture was maintained at field capacity by daily additions of water or 30 μg ml−1 N in the form of an inorganic salt solution (KNO3). There was no response to the solution containing exogenous N likely because the amount of N in soil was greater than demand. Actual shoot and root dry weights in mixtures were compared with the expected dry weights, which were calculated as 50% of the root and shoot dry weights in monoculture. For grain sorghum, actual dry weights in mixture were often better than expected. Replacement series indices calculated from dry weight data described grain sorghum as competitively superior to its weedy relatives. These results indicate that further research on N management for cultivated sorghum, as a means of increasing crop competitiveness relative to that of weeds, may be unwarranted. However, a better understanding of other competition mechanisms inherent in grain sorghum might suggest management alternatives to enhance crop competitiveness with weeds.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Weed Science Society of America 

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.)

References

Literature Cited

Alfoldi, Z. and Pinter, L. 1992. Accumulation and partitioning of biomass and soluble carbohydrates in maize seedlings as affected by source of nitrogen, nitrogen concentration, and cultivar. J. Plant Nutr. 15:25672583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Angonin, C., Caussanel, J. P., and Meynard, J. M. 1996. Competition between winter wheat and Veronica hederifolia: influence of weed density and the amount and timing of nitrogen application. Weed Res. 36:175187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arriola, P. E. and Ellstrand, N. C. 1996. Crop-to-weed gene flow in the genus Sorghum (Poaceae): spontaneous interspecific hybridization between johnsongrass, Sorghum halepense, and crop sorghum, S. bicolor . Am. J. Bot. 83:11531160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, H. G. 1972. Migration of weeds. Pages 327347 In Valentine, D. H., ed. Taxonomy, Phytogeography and Evolution. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Ball, D. A., Wysocki, D. J., and Chastain, T. G. 1996. Nitrogen application timing effects on downy brome (Bromus tectorum) and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum) growth and yield. Weed Technol. 10:305310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnside, O. C. 1965. Seed and Phenological Studies with Shattercane. Lincoln, NE: Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station Research Bulletin 220. 37 p.Google Scholar
Burnside, O. C. 1968. Control of wild cane in soybean. Weed Sci. 16:1822.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, D. R. and Burnside, O. C. 1981. Use of the recirculating sprayer to control tall weed escapes in crops. Weed Sci. 29:174179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carlson, H. L. and Hill, J. E. 1985. Wild oat (Avena fatua) competition with spring wheat: effects of nitrogen fertilization. Weed Sci. 34:2933.Google Scholar
Celarier, R. P. 1958. Cytotaxonomic notes on the subsection Halepensia of the genus Sorghum . Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 85:4962.Google Scholar
Connolly, J. 1986. On difficulties with replacement-series methodology in mixture experiments. J. Appl. Ecol. 23:125137.Google Scholar
Cousens, R. and O’Neill, M. 1993. Density dependence of replacement series experiments. Oikos 66:347352.Google Scholar
Davidson, S. 1984. Wheat and ryegrass competition for nitrogen. Rural Res. 122:46.Google Scholar
de Wet, J.M.J. 1978. Systematics and evolution of Sorghum sect. Sorghum (Gramineae). Am. J. Bot. 65:477484.Google Scholar
de Wet, J.M.J. and Harlan, J. R. 1971. The origin and domestication of Sorghum bicolor . Econ. Bot. 25:128135.Google Scholar
de Wet, J.M.J., Harlan, J. R., and Price, E. G. 1970. Origin of variability in the spontanea complex of Sorghum bicolor . Am. J. Bot. 57:704707.Google Scholar
de Wet, J.M.J., Harlan, J. R., and Price, E. G. 1976. Variability in Sorghum bicolor . Pages 453463 In Harlan, J. R., de Wet, J.M.J., and Stemler, A.B.L., eds. Origins of African Plant Domestication. The Hague: Mouton Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Wet, J.M.J. and Huckabay, J. P. 1967. The origin of Sorghum bicolor . II. Distribution and domestication. Evolution 21:787802.Google Scholar
De Wit, C. T. 1960. On competition. Versl. Landbouwkd. Onderz. 66:882.Google Scholar
Dowler, C. C. 1994. Weed survey—southern states. Proc. South. Weed Sci. Soc. 47:279299.Google Scholar
Exley, D. M. and Snaydon, R. W. 1992. Effects of nitrogen fertilizer and emergence date on root and shoot competition between wheat and blackgrass. Weed Res. 32:175182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fawcett, R. S. and Slife, F. W. 1978. Effects of field applications of nitrate on weed seed germination and dormancy. Weed Sci. 26:594596.Google Scholar
Firbank, L. G. and Watkinson, A. R. 1985. On the analysis of competition within two-species mixtures of plants. J. Appl. Ecol. 22:503517.Google Scholar
Gardner, J. C., Maranville, J. W., and Paparozzi, E. T. 1994. Nitrogen use efficiency among diverse sorghum cultivars. Crop Sci. 34:728733.Google Scholar
Grace, J. B. 1991. A clarification of the debate between Grime and Tilman. Funct. Ecol. 5:583587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grime, J. P. 1979. Plant Strategies and Vegetation Processes. London: J. Wiley. 222 p.Google Scholar
Grime, J. P. 1987. Dominant and subordinate components of plant communities: implications for succession, stability and diversity. Pages 413428 In Gray, A. J., Crawley, M. J., and Edwards, P. J., eds. Colonization, Succession and Diversity. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hadley, H. H. 1953. Cytological relationships between Sorghum vulgare and S. halepense . Agron. J. 45:139143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hadley, H. H. 1958. Chromosome numbers, fertility and rhizome expression of hybrids between grain sorghum and johnsongrass. Agron. J. 50:278282.Google Scholar
Harlan, J. R. and de Wet, J.M.J. 1974. Sympatric evolution in sorghum. Genetics 78:473474.Google Scholar
Harlan, J. R. and de Wet, J.M.J. 1972. A simplified classification of cultivated sorghum. Crop Sci. 12:172176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harper, J. L. 1977. The Population Biology of Plants. London: Academic Press. pp. 255380.Google Scholar
Hoffman, M. L., Buhler, D. D., and Regnier, E. E. 2002. Utilizing Sorghum as a functional model of crop-weed competition. II. Effects of manipulating emergence time or rate. Weed Sci. 50:473478.Google Scholar
Holm, L. G., Plucknett, D. L., Pancho, J. V., and Herberger, J. P. 1977. The World's Worst Weeds: Distribution and Biology. Honolulu, HI: University Press of Hawaii. pp. 5461.Google Scholar
Inouye, R. S. and Schaffer, W. M. 1981. On the ecological meaning of ratio (deWit) diagrams in plant ecology. Ecology 62:16791681.Google Scholar
Karlen, D. L. and Colvin, T. S. 1992. Alternative farming system effects on profile nitrogen concentrations on two Iowa farms. Soil Sci. Am. J. 56:12491256.Google Scholar
Karper, R. E. and Chisholm, A. T. 1936. Chromosome numbers in Sorghum . Am. J. Bot. 23:369374.Google Scholar
Lamond, R. E., Whitney, D. A., Hickman, J. S., and Bonczkowski, L. C. 1991. Nitrogen rate and placement for grain sorghum production in no-tillage systems. J. Prod. Agric. 4:531535.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maranville, J. W., Clark, R. B., and Ross, W. M. 1980. Nitrogen efficiency in grain sorghum. J. Plant Nutr. 2:577589.Google Scholar
Mead, R. 1979. Competition experiments. Biometrics 35:4154.Google Scholar
Monaghan, N. 1979. The biology of johnson grass (Sorghum halepense). Weed Res. 14:261267.Google Scholar
Onken, A. B., Lavelle, M. J., and Peterson, G. C. 1985. Improving nutrient use efficiency in sorghums. Pages 1527 In Wilkinson, D., ed. Proceedings of the 41st Annual Corn and Sorghum Industry Research Conference. Washington, DC: American Seed Trade Association.Google Scholar
Oyer, E. B., Gries, G. A., and Rogers, B. J. 1959. The seasonal development of johnson grass plants. Weeds 7:1319.Google Scholar
Quinby, J. R. and Martin, J. H. 1954. Sorghum improvement. Adv. Agron. 6:305359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rasmussen, K., Rasmussen, J., and Petersen, J. 1996. Effects of fertilizer placement on weeds in weed harrowed spring barley. Acta Agric. Scand. 46:192196.Google Scholar
Roy, R. N. and Wright, B. D. 1973. Sorghum growth and nutrient uptake in relation to soil fertility: I. Dry matter accumulation patterns, yield, and N content of grain. Agron. J. 65:709711.Google Scholar
Sardi, K. and Beres, I. 1996. Effects of fertilizer salts on the germination of corn, winter wheat, and their common weed species. Commun. Soil Plant Anal. 27:12271235.Google Scholar
Snowden, J. D. 1936. The Cultivated Races of Sorghum . London: Allard and Son. 272 p.Google Scholar
Snowden, J. D. 1955. The wild fodder sorghums of the section Eusorghum . J. Linn. Soc. 5:191260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soil Conservation Service. 1981. Soil Survey of Boone County, Iowa. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. 149 p.Google Scholar
Tilman, D. 1977. Resource competition between planktonic algae: an experimental and theoretical approach. Ecology 58:338348.Google Scholar
Tilman, D. 1985. The resource ratio hypothesis of succession. Am. Nat. 125:827852.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tilman, D. 1988. Plant Strategies and the Dynamics and Structure of Plant Communities. Princeton: Princeton Monographs. 296 p.Google Scholar
Tollenaar, M., Nissanka, S. P., Aguilera, A., Weise, S. F., and Swanton, C. J. 1994. Effect of weed interference and soil nitrogen on four maize hybrids. Agron. J. 86:596601.Google Scholar
Voss, R. D., Mallarino, A. P., and Killorn, R. 1996. General Guide for Crop Nutrient Recommendations in Iowa. Ames, IA: Iowa State University Extension Service Publication Pm-1688. 22 p.Google Scholar
Warwick, S. I., Thompson, B. K., and Black, L. D. 1984. Population variation in Sorghum halepense, johnson grass, at the northern limits of its range. Can. J. Bot. 62:17811790.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wicks, G. A. 1984. Integrated systems for control and management of downy brome (Bromus tectorum) in cropland. Weed Sci. 32 (Suppl. 1): 2631.Google Scholar
Zweifel, T. R., Maranville, J. W., Ross, W. M., and Clark, R. B. 1987. Nitrogen fertility and irrigation influence on grain sorghum nitrogen efficiency. Agron. J. 79:419422.Google Scholar