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Weed Biology

Weed Biology. Weed Classifications. Life cycle annuals summer annuals winter annuals biennials perennials simple creeping. Weed Reproduction. Two means sexual seed or spores asexual vegetative reproduction. Weed Reproduction. Sexual

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Weed Biology

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  1. Weed Biology

  2. Weed Classifications • Life cycle • annuals • summer annuals • winter annuals • biennials • perennials • simple • creeping

  3. Weed Reproduction • Two means • sexual • seed or spores • asexual • vegetative reproduction

  4. Weed Reproduction • Sexual • many weeds cross-pollination or outcrossing not necessary • weeds are self-compatible • important weed characteristic

  5. Weed Reproduction • Sexual • weeds colonize wide variety disturbed habitats • breeding system in relation to ability to colonize varied habitats is of interest • adaptive value of uniparental reproduction with occasional outcrossing - Baker’s Rule (1974)

  6. Weed Reproduction • Sexual • many weeds use inbreeding • produce stable duplicate individuals adapted to local environment • occasional outcrossing for recombination to occupy new or changing microenvironments

  7. Weed Reproduction • Asexual/vegetative reproduction • common weed characteristic • most common to perennials • not restricted to perennials • Definitions • ramet is a single unit of clonal growth • genet genetically distinct individuals

  8. Weed Reproduction • Types vegetative reproduction: • stolons • above ground shoots grow along surface • produce adventitious roots at nodes • bermudagrass - perennial • large crabgrass - annual

  9. Weed Reproduction • Types vegetative reproduction: • rhizomes • underground shoots • produce adventitious roots usually at nodes • johnsongrass - perennial • quackgrass - perennial • yellow nutsedge - perennial

  10. Weed Reproduction • Types vegetative reproduction: • tubers • enlarged terminal portions of rhizomes • extensive storage tissue & axillary buds • yellow nutsedge - perennial • Jerusalem artichoke - perennial

  11. Weed Reproduction • Types vegetative reproduction: • bulbs • underground modified buds • shoot & fleshy scale leaves • nutrient storage in leaves • wild garlic - perennial

  12. Bulbous bluegrass bulbs

  13. Weed Reproduction • Types vegetative reproduction: • roots • usually, long, extensive • horizontal sections produce adventitious shoots & new roots • often form buds • Canada thistle - perennial • Leafy spurge - perennial

  14. Canada thistle 14 months growth

  15. Weed Reproduction • Types vegetative reproduction: • shoots or stems • some spp produce adventitious roots & new shoots near branch tips • tamarisk species • sprout from base or stump • dandelion • locoweed

  16. Tamarixparviflorashoots from broken Fragment of stem washed downstream

  17. Weed Reproduction • Types vegetative reproduction: • fragmentation • spread/establishment from excised plant part • most underground tissues capable • also from leaves or foliar shoots • purslane - annual • field bindweed - perennial

  18. Weed Dispersal • Dissemination/dispersal • scattering of propagules • reinfest site or transport new site • seeds most important mechanism • movement of vegetative propagules also occurs, but less important • human activities often involved

  19. Weed Dispersal • Dissemination/dispersal • seeds dispersed in spaceandtime

  20. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in space • adaptations to move away from parents • most fall close to parent • probability seedling mortality (competition) decreases w/distance • optimum distance seed/seedling numbers population establishment • creeping infestation occurs

  21. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in space • wind, water, wildlife, humans • main dispersal vehicles or forces • weeds evolved appendages, coatings, palatability aid in dispersal • fruits or seeds

  22. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in space • wildlife & humans • barbs, hooks • adhere hooves, hair, clothing • palatable fruits/seeds • eaten & excreted • harvested with crops • seed or hay crops • autos & other vehicles

  23. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in space • wind • dust • spores of Equisetum • winged • toadflaxes • plumed • pappus of many Asteraceae • tumbling • diffuse knapweed, Russian thistle

  24. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in space • water • irrigation water • 1920, CO, 81 weed spp., 156 ditches • 1980, NE, 77 weed spp • 2-5X more in canals than North Platte • 1975, WA • 125,000,000/ha non-irrigated • 500,000,000/ha irrigated 5 yr • rivers, streams, creeks • invasive weeds

  25. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in time • dormancy • arrest in seed embryo development under suitable germination conditions • dormancy is dispersal in time

  26. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in time • Harper 1977 • some seeds ‘born dormant’ (innate) • some ‘achieve dormancy’ (induced) • some ‘have it thrust upon them’ (enforced)

  27. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in time • Classification of dormancy • primarydormancy: • innatedormancy is an arrested state of embryo at dispersal • incomplete embryo development • “afteripening” • chemical inhibitors fruit or seed coat

  28. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in time • Classification of dormancy • secondarydormancy • enforceddormancy is the arrested state of embryo maintained in a limited environment • e.g. inadequate O2, temp., pH, moisture • seed will germinate when conditions corrected

  29. Weed Dispersal • Seeds dispersed in time • Classification of dormancy • secondarydormancy • induced dormancy • seed shed from parent not dormant; • but limiting environment causes arrested embryo state that will persist even after germination conditions optimal • internal changes within embryo

  30. Germination & Establishment • Germination • light requirement • long known seeds need light to germ • light flash mechanism may allow/assist weeds or pioneer plants to exploit disturbed environments

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