Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica

Striga hermonthica remains one of the greatest biological threats to cereal production in the savannahs of sub-Saharan Africa. Control efforts at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Nigeria, focus on developing integrated S. hermonthica management (ISM) options such as legume...

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Main Authors: Emechebe, A., Berner, D., Lagoke, S.T.O., Ahonsi, M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96336
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author Emechebe, A.
Berner, D.
Lagoke, S.T.O.
Ahonsi, M.
author_browse Ahonsi, M.
Berner, D.
Emechebe, A.
Lagoke, S.T.O.
author_facet Emechebe, A.
Berner, D.
Lagoke, S.T.O.
Ahonsi, M.
author_sort Emechebe, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Striga hermonthica remains one of the greatest biological threats to cereal production in the savannahs of sub-Saharan Africa. Control efforts at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Nigeria, focus on developing integrated S. hermonthica management (ISM) options such as legume-cereal rotation, use of host–plant resistance, soil-based biological control exploiting enhancement of naturally occurring biotic soil suppressiveness, and use of acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibiting herbicides as host–crop seed treatments. We investigated, in pots, if soybean crops with or without fertilizer (N, P, or NPK) and preceding a maize crop used as a bioassay enhanced biotic soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica, and if the ALS-inhibitor herbicides, imazaquin and nicosulfuron, used to control weeds in preceding crops constitute any risk to this biotic system. Factors tested included: (1) crop preceding bioassay maize (soybean [EMGOPA] versuss maize [8338-1]); (2) herbicide weed control in preceding crop (imazaquin in soybean and nicosulfuron in maize versus hand weeding); (3) fertilizer application to preceding crop (90 kg N ha−1, 40 kg P ha−1; 90 kg NPK; versus no fertilizer); (4) soil treatment before planting bioassay maize (pasteurized soil versus non-pasteurized soil). Effects of treatments on biotic suppressiveness were evaluated by comparing effects of treatments in non-pasteurized soil with those of the same treatments in pasteurized soil. Results indicated that biotic soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica existed naturally in the soil used and was enhanced by a preceding soybean crop and application of N, P or NPK fertilizers. Weed control using ALS-inhibiting herbicides in the preceding crops, particularly imazaquin applied in soybean, had a negative effect on natural soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica parasitism in maize. Results of this study further confirm the biotic nature of soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica, and stress its important role in ISM. Land-based management strategies for S. hermonthica control, such as legume crops in rotation to enhance soil N and fertilizer application appear to directly enhance soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica. Because ALS-inhibiting herbicides pose a risk to biotic soil suppressiveness, their use as a primary control measure for S. hermonthica control in Africa may not be a sustainable approach.
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spelling CGSpace963362025-11-11T10:47:22Z Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica Emechebe, A. Berner, D. Lagoke, S.T.O. Ahonsi, M. soybeans nicosulfuron Striga hermonthica remains one of the greatest biological threats to cereal production in the savannahs of sub-Saharan Africa. Control efforts at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), Nigeria, focus on developing integrated S. hermonthica management (ISM) options such as legume-cereal rotation, use of host–plant resistance, soil-based biological control exploiting enhancement of naturally occurring biotic soil suppressiveness, and use of acetolactate synthase (ALS)-inhibiting herbicides as host–crop seed treatments. We investigated, in pots, if soybean crops with or without fertilizer (N, P, or NPK) and preceding a maize crop used as a bioassay enhanced biotic soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica, and if the ALS-inhibitor herbicides, imazaquin and nicosulfuron, used to control weeds in preceding crops constitute any risk to this biotic system. Factors tested included: (1) crop preceding bioassay maize (soybean [EMGOPA] versuss maize [8338-1]); (2) herbicide weed control in preceding crop (imazaquin in soybean and nicosulfuron in maize versus hand weeding); (3) fertilizer application to preceding crop (90 kg N ha−1, 40 kg P ha−1; 90 kg NPK; versus no fertilizer); (4) soil treatment before planting bioassay maize (pasteurized soil versus non-pasteurized soil). Effects of treatments on biotic suppressiveness were evaluated by comparing effects of treatments in non-pasteurized soil with those of the same treatments in pasteurized soil. Results indicated that biotic soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica existed naturally in the soil used and was enhanced by a preceding soybean crop and application of N, P or NPK fertilizers. Weed control using ALS-inhibiting herbicides in the preceding crops, particularly imazaquin applied in soybean, had a negative effect on natural soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica parasitism in maize. Results of this study further confirm the biotic nature of soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica, and stress its important role in ISM. Land-based management strategies for S. hermonthica control, such as legume crops in rotation to enhance soil N and fertilizer application appear to directly enhance soil suppressiveness to S. hermonthica. Because ALS-inhibiting herbicides pose a risk to biotic soil suppressiveness, their use as a primary control measure for S. hermonthica control in Africa may not be a sustainable approach. 2004-12 2018-08-09T06:40:28Z 2018-08-09T06:40:28Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96336 en Limited Access application/pdf Elsevier Ahonsi, M.O., Berner, D.K., Emechebe, A.M. & Lagoke, S.T. (2004). Effects of ALS-inhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 104(3), 453-463.
spellingShingle soybeans
nicosulfuron
Emechebe, A.
Berner, D.
Lagoke, S.T.O.
Ahonsi, M.
Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica
title Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica
title_full Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica
title_fullStr Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica
title_full_unstemmed Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica
title_short Effects of ALSinhibitor herbicides, crop sequence, and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to Striga hermonthica
title_sort effects of alsinhibitor herbicides crop sequence and fertilization on natural soil suppressiveness to striga hermonthica
topic soybeans
nicosulfuron
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96336
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