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Unravelling the process of weed seed predation: Developing options for better weed control
Authors:Bàrbara Baraibar  Eva Carrión  Jordi Recasens  Paula R. Westerman
Affiliation:1. Dept. Hortofructicultura, Botànica i Jardineria, Escola Tècnica Superior d’Enginyeria Agrària, Universitat de Lleida, Av. Alcalde Rovira Roure 191, 25198 Lleida, Spain;2. Institute for Land Use – Crop Health, Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of Rostock, Satower Str. 48, D-18051 Rostock, Germany
Abstract:Seed predation can cause significant losses of weed seeds in agricultural systems and can, thus, contribute to weed control. The removal of Lolium multiflorum and Vicia villosa seeds by harvester ants, Messor barbarus, and granivorous rodents, Mus spretus, in six cereal fields in NE Spain was separated into three sequential processes, namely (1) the probability of finding a seed cache (cache encounter rate), (2) the percentage of seeds utilized once a seed cache has been found (seed exploitation rate) and (3) seed selection if multiple species are present (preference). Identifying the most important behavioural component and factors that drive it may help to better understand and manage seed predation.Seed cache encounter rate correlated well with overall seed removal rate caused by harvester ants (r2 = 0.91), or rodents (r2 = 0.82). Once found, seed exploitation rates were high and fairly constant from spring to autumn for harvester ants, and low throughout the season for rodents. Harvester ants removed almost all L. multiflorum seeds from caches found, while the exploitation of V. villosa seeds varied across the season. In the case of rodents, cache encounter rate, but not exploitation rate, could be explained by canopy cover provided by the crop. L. multiflorum seemed to be preferred in early 2007, whereas V. villosa was in 2008.The adoption of no-till or minimum tillage systems together with the establishment of field edge vegetation are likely to encourage seed cache encounter and exploitation rates by both harvester ants and rodents, thus leading to increased weed control in semi-arid cereals.
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