Diversification of traditional paddy field impacts target species in weed seedbank
Palabras clave:
Rice-based cropping system. Flooded rice. Crop-livestock integration.Resumen
Weed competition is a challenge to rice monocropping growers in the context of herbicide resistant weeds and diffi cult
weeds to manage using chemical control. Diversifying crop rotations through integrated crop-livestock systems (ICLS) can be an
alternative to face this challenge. As weed seedbank refl ects management practices, this study aimed to assess the impact of a traditional
paddy fi eld and four lowland ICLS on the weed seedbank, in a long-term ICLS experiment located in Cristal, RS, Brazil. Treatments
consisted of fi ve cropping systems: T1 – rice monocropping; T2 – rice-beef cattle integration; T3 – soybean-rice–beef cattle integration;
T4 – Sudan grass-soybean-maize-rice-beef cattle integration; and T5 - rice-beef cattle integration in cultivated and natural grassland.
The seedbank was assessed in the fourth experimental year, Oct-2016, at three soil depths (0-5; 5-10 and 10-20 cm). In a mid-term
temporal scale, the diversifi cation of paddy fi eld through ICLS did not affect weed seedbank size. However, seeds in T1 were equally
distributed along the soil profi le, in contrast to the other cropping systems, where weed seeds accumulated in the 0-5 cm depth.
Lowland ICLS designs that comprises the integration of summer crops with grazing winter cover crops decrease the proportion of
Cyperaceae weed species in the topsoil seedbank. The depletion of weedy rice seedbank is more pronounced in lowland ICLS designs
that integrates different summer crop in rotation with grazing cover crops.