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Mowing during rainfall enhances the control of Cirsium arvense
Authors:Graeme W Bourdôt  Geoff A Hurrell  Robert A Skipp  Jana Monk  David J Saville
Institution:1. AgResearch Limited , Private Bag 4749, Christchurch , 8140 , New Zealand;2. AgResearch Limited , Private Bag 11008, Palmerston North , 4442 , New Zealand;3. Saville Statistical Consulting Limited , PO Box 69192, Lincoln , 7640 , New Zealand
Abstract:Pastoral farmers in New Zealand have described dramatic demises in populations of the weed Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop., a perennial herb indigenous to Eurasia, following its mowing during rainfall. To test the hypotheses (1) that the mowing of C. arvense during rainfall increases the control of this weed and (2) that the causal organism in this ‘mowing-in-the-rain’ effect is the vascular wilt fungus Verticillium dahliae, two series of field experiments were carried out in C. arvense-infested pastures in New Zealand, one in autumn 2008 (Experiment series 1, 9 farms), and another in spring/summer 2008–2009 (Experiment series 2, 12 farms). The effect of mowing in the rain as compared to mowing in the dry was to reduce the % ground cover of the thistle in the spring following treatment by 21 and 32% in Experiment series 1 and 2, respectively. Correlations of this ‘rain versus dry’ effect with the incidence of V. dahliae in the subterranean parts of C. arvense shoots sampled in each of the two field experiment series provided no statistical evidence that the effect increased with V. dahliae incidence. Thus these experiments provide no support for the hypothesis that V. dahliae is the biological mechanism for the ‘mowing-in-the-rain’ effect. Nevertheless, they do support mowing during rainfall as a simple and effective management tactic for C. arvense.
Keywords:Californian thistle  Canada thistle  creeping thistle  biological weed control  fungi
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