Investigating and modelling the morphological plasticity of weeds
Authored by Nathalie Colbach, Alban Collard, Sebastien H M Guyot, Nicolas M Munier-Jolain, Hugues Busset
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.fcr.2013.09.018
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Environment and Agronomy Department (INRA)
Region of Burgundy
Platforms:
VISILOG
Model Documentation:
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Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Weed dynamics models are essential for assessing crop management
techniques and cropping systems. They must include a competition model
that accounts for the particular characteristics of crop:weed stands, i.e. heterogeneous canopies consisting of contrasting species presenting
a high morphological plasticity and resulting from successive emergence
flushes. In a previous study, we developed a model which predicts light
incidence and absorption in each location of a 3D, individual-based
canopy as a function of plant morphology, latitude and seasonal solar
height. Plant morphology was simplified to a set of five plant traits
(plant height, diameter, leaf vs. non-leaf biomass ratio, specific leaf
area and median leaf distribution height). Here, the objective was to
propose and parameterize a new modelling approach for predicting these
simplified morphological variables as a function of two effects that are
notoriously difficult to separate (1) plant biomass which results from
past light absorption and determines a large part of the current
competitive ability and (2) past and current shading to integrate
changes in morphology resulting from plant response to shading. A field
experiment was sown with oilseed rape in September. Gaps were
artificially created in the canopy by removing seedlings after
emergence; additional bare-soil plots were created. Target plants of one
grass weed species (Alopecurus myosuroides), three broadleaved weed
species (Galium aparine, Sinapis arvensis, Stellaria media), and one
broadleaved crop species (oilseed rape) were transplanted into the
various canopy scenarios. Target and canopy plants were sampled five
times from October to April to determine the morphological variables. A
shading index was calculated from incident light averaged over each
target plant from predictions with the light availability submodel. A
single equation was successfully fitted to each morphological variable, estimating parameters in shadeless conditions, a correlation parameter
with plant biomass (for height and diameter only), and a parameter
representing sensitivity to shading for each variable, species and date.
Plant biomass decreased in the shade but plants were taller with more
stem biomass (except in grass weeds) and larger/thinner leaves
concentrated towards the top of the plant. The grass species was least
plastic; among the broadleaved species, the crop species presented the
least plasticity. The light availability and the plasticity submodels
were combined to simulate the effect of crop sowing densities and
patterns (row-sown vs. broadcast, varying interrow widths) on weed
morphological variables. The latter was more altered in dense and in
row-sown vs. broadcast canopies but its range of variation was smaller
in the former, pointing to a more selective and less diverse
environment. The consequences for weed adaptation to crops and for
optimizing crop and cultivar choices were discussed. (C) 2013 Elsevier
B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Competition
growth
Simulation-model
Population-dynamics
Sugar-beet
Chenopodium-album
Seed characteristics
Amaranthus-powellii
Light interception
Spring
wheat