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Quantitative evaluation of wheat against volunteer rye in Iran
Author(s) -
ATRI ALIREZA,
BAGHESTANI MOHAMMAD A.,
PARTOVI MAHBOOBEH
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
weed biology and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.351
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1445-6664
pISSN - 1444-6162
DOI - 10.1111/j.1445-6664.2008.00295.x
Subject(s) - interspecific competition , competition (biology) , agronomy , biology , intraspecific competition , wheat grain , randomized block design , winter wheat , common wheat , factorial experiment , yield (engineering) , botany , mathematics , ecology , biochemistry , statistics , materials science , gene , metallurgy , chromosome
Rye infestations have increased in frequency and severity in the wheat fields of Iran and have caused yield reductions in wheat production. In order to study the competition effects of wheat against rye, an experiment was conducted at the research centers of Karaj and Varamin, Iran, during 2001 and 2002. The experimental design was a randomized complete block with 24 treatments and four replications. The treatments included pure stands of wheat at densities of 350, 450, 550, and 650 plants m −2 and volunteer rye densities of 10, 30, 50, and 70 plants m −2 , and mixed stands of wheat and rye at complete factorial densities. The results indicated that rye was a superior competitor compared to wheat. The biological and economic yields of wheat were mainly affected by interspecific competition in the Karaj region. This was also true during the first year in the Varamin region but, in the second year, the biological and economic yields of wheat were equally affected by interspecific and intraspecific competition because of increasing precipitation. The evaluation of competitive ability, using regression coefficients, showed that in Karaj, the effect of one rye plant on wheat was approximately equivalent to three and two plants of wheat in reducing the grain yield of wheat in the first and second years, respectively, while in Varamin, it was equivalent to three and 1.2 plants of wheat, respectively. In other words, each 0.36 and 0.51 rye plant in Karaj and each 0.36 and 0.84 rye plant in Varamin had the same impact on the reciprocal wheat grain yield as did one wheat plant in the first and second years, respectively.