Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice

Drought is the most important abiotic constraint in rainfed rice systems. In these systems, Amaranthus spinosus and Leptochloa chinensis are the dominant weed species, which may reduce the available water to rice by competition and cause water stress in the crop. Two studies were conducted in a gree...

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Autores principales: Chauhan, Bhagirath S., Abugho, Seth B.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Scientific Research Publishing, Inc. 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165708
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author Chauhan, Bhagirath S.
Abugho, Seth B.
author_browse Abugho, Seth B.
Chauhan, Bhagirath S.
author_facet Chauhan, Bhagirath S.
Abugho, Seth B.
author_sort Chauhan, Bhagirath S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Drought is the most important abiotic constraint in rainfed rice systems. In these systems, Amaranthus spinosus and Leptochloa chinensis are the dominant weed species, which may reduce the available water to rice by competition and cause water stress in the crop. Two studies were conducted in a greenhouse to evaluate the growth response of A. spinosus and rice and L. chinensis and rice to water stress. The water stress treatments were 12.5%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% of field capacity and the plants were grown until weed maturity (i.e., 63 days from seeding). Rice plants did not survive at 12.5% and 25% of field capacity, but both weed species survived in all the treatments. Both weed species produced a significant number of tillers/branches and leaves even at the lowest soil water content. The maximum amount of total shoot biomass produced by weed plants was 2.5 to 3 times more than that of rice plants. The soil water content to achieve 50% of the maximum aboveground biomass was 47%-50% of field capacity for rice, whereas it was 39% and 31% of field capacity for A. spinosus and L. chinensis, respectively. A. spinosus plants responded to increasing water stress with increased leaf weight ratio, whereas the leaf weight ratio of L. chinensis decreased with increases in water stress. The ability of A. spinosus and L. chinensis to produce shoot biomass under water-stressed conditions suggests that weed management strategies are needed that can minimize weed survival in water-limited environments. These strategies may include the use of weed-competitive and drought-tolerant cultivars, high seeding rates, and optimum timing of fertilizers.
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spelling CGSpace1657082024-12-19T14:12:07Z Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice Chauhan, Bhagirath S. Abugho, Seth B. amaranthus spinosus crop-weed competition drought resistance drought stress growth leaves leptochloa chinensis plant density shoots soil water content stress stress tolerance tillers weed control weeds Drought is the most important abiotic constraint in rainfed rice systems. In these systems, Amaranthus spinosus and Leptochloa chinensis are the dominant weed species, which may reduce the available water to rice by competition and cause water stress in the crop. Two studies were conducted in a greenhouse to evaluate the growth response of A. spinosus and rice and L. chinensis and rice to water stress. The water stress treatments were 12.5%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% of field capacity and the plants were grown until weed maturity (i.e., 63 days from seeding). Rice plants did not survive at 12.5% and 25% of field capacity, but both weed species survived in all the treatments. Both weed species produced a significant number of tillers/branches and leaves even at the lowest soil water content. The maximum amount of total shoot biomass produced by weed plants was 2.5 to 3 times more than that of rice plants. The soil water content to achieve 50% of the maximum aboveground biomass was 47%-50% of field capacity for rice, whereas it was 39% and 31% of field capacity for A. spinosus and L. chinensis, respectively. A. spinosus plants responded to increasing water stress with increased leaf weight ratio, whereas the leaf weight ratio of L. chinensis decreased with increases in water stress. The ability of A. spinosus and L. chinensis to produce shoot biomass under water-stressed conditions suggests that weed management strategies are needed that can minimize weed survival in water-limited environments. These strategies may include the use of weed-competitive and drought-tolerant cultivars, high seeding rates, and optimum timing of fertilizers. 2013 2024-12-19T12:55:23Z 2024-12-19T12:55:23Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165708 en Open Access Scientific Research Publishing, Inc. Chauhan, Bhagirath S.; Abugho, Seth B. 2013. Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice. AJPS, Volume 04 no. 05 p. 989-998
spellingShingle amaranthus spinosus
crop-weed competition
drought resistance
drought stress
growth
leaves
leptochloa chinensis
plant density
shoots
soil water content
stress
stress tolerance
tillers
weed control
weeds
Chauhan, Bhagirath S.
Abugho, Seth B.
Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice
title Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice
title_full Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice
title_fullStr Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice
title_full_unstemmed Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice
title_short Effect of water stress on the growth and development of Amaranthus spinosus, Leptochloa chinensis, and rice
title_sort effect of water stress on the growth and development of amaranthus spinosus leptochloa chinensis and rice
topic amaranthus spinosus
crop-weed competition
drought resistance
drought stress
growth
leaves
leptochloa chinensis
plant density
shoots
soil water content
stress
stress tolerance
tillers
weed control
weeds
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165708
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