Scale, Experimental Design and the Detection of Ineterspecific Competition within Plant Communities(<SPECIAL ISSUE>INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM : MAINTENANCE MECHANISM AND DIVERSITY OF PLANT SPECIES POPULATIONS)
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概要
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We report preliminary results of a series of experiments designed to explore the importance of interspecific competition within arable weed communities at different scales. Competition hierarchies were apparent from a pot experiment with different levels of nutrients and water. Two field experiments looked at Bromus sterilis, Galium aparine and Papaver rhoeas in winter wheat in the field, in a range of combinations and management treatments, and a fourth field experiment included a wider variety of species. There was little effect of fertilizer on population behaviour in the the field. Bromus increased around ten fold per year on minimum-tilled plots, regardless of other treatments. Galium increased on organically-fertilized and minimum-tilled plots, but only in the absence of Bromus. Papaver densities remained low, but again were depressed in the presence of high densities of Bromus. Taken together, the experiments demonstrate the existence of competition between weed species. However, as the design of the experiment increased to include greater levels of environmental variation, so competition became more difficult to detect, and less useful for interpreting the results than knowledge of the biology of the individual species. At the scale of interest to the farmer, the level of competition is not a good predictor for weed population dynamics.
- 種生物学会の論文
著者
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Webb D.
Broom's Barn Experimental Station Afrc Institute Of Arable Crops Research
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Mccloskey M.
Anglia Polytechnic University:(present Address)department Of Statistics And Modelling Science Univer
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FIRBANK L.
Institute of Terrestrial Ecology
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LINTELL-SMITH G.
School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia
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SMITH J.
nee Baylis. School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia
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Lintell-smith G.
School Of Biological Sciences University Of East Anglia