Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application. / Brandmeier, Jana; Pappagallo, Silvia; Karley, Alison J.; Kiær, Lars Pødenphant; Scherber, Christoph.

Aspects of Applied Biology: Intercropping for sustainability: Research developments and their application. Vol. 146 2021.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Brandmeier, J, Pappagallo, S, Karley, AJ, Kiær, LP & Scherber, C 2021, Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application. in Aspects of Applied Biology: Intercropping for sustainability: Research developments and their application. vol. 146, Intercropping for sustainability, 18/01/2021. https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.4808649

APA

Brandmeier, J., Pappagallo, S., Karley, A. J., Kiær, L. P., & Scherber, C. (2021). Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application. In Aspects of Applied Biology: Intercropping for sustainability: Research developments and their application (Vol. 146) https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.4808649

Vancouver

Brandmeier J, Pappagallo S, Karley AJ, Kiær LP, Scherber C. Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application. In Aspects of Applied Biology: Intercropping for sustainability: Research developments and their application. Vol. 146. 2021 https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.4808649

Author

Brandmeier, Jana ; Pappagallo, Silvia ; Karley, Alison J. ; Kiær, Lars Pødenphant ; Scherber, Christoph. / Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application. Aspects of Applied Biology: Intercropping for sustainability: Research developments and their application. Vol. 146 2021.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{bf1fed099ab341da8fc81ad6da8b285b,
title = "Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application",
abstract = "The use of pesticides and fertilisers in the last decades has led to numerous problems for mankind and the environment: polluted ground water, decreased soil quality, biodiversity loss and resistance of weed and pest species. To counteract these problems, conventional farming systems will need to become more sustainable. One approach is intercropping, which is common in traditional or low intensity farming, but not in conventional agriculture. Thus, little is known about responses of biotic interactions to intercropping under conventional management. In a cereal-legume intercropping experiment, we found that disease infection was highest in cereal sole crops and weed biomass was highest in legume sole crops, while herbivory was highest in intercrops. Management intensity had significant effects on pathogen infection, herbivory and weed biomass, but results differed between wheat-bean vs barley-pea cropping systems, showing that intercropping in conventional agriculture can reduce antagonistic patterns, but also that plant species must be specifically chosen for optimised performance with respect to reduced external inputs.",
author = "Jana Brandmeier and Silvia Pappagallo and Karley, {Alison J.} and Ki{\ae}r, {Lars P{\o}denphant} and Christoph Scherber",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.5281/ZENODO.4808649",
language = "English",
volume = "146",
booktitle = "Aspects of Applied Biology",
note = "Intercropping for sustainability ; Conference date: 18-01-2021 Through 20-01-2021",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Antagonistis responses to crop diversification at two levels of fertiliser and herbicide application

AU - Brandmeier, Jana

AU - Pappagallo, Silvia

AU - Karley, Alison J.

AU - Kiær, Lars Pødenphant

AU - Scherber, Christoph

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The use of pesticides and fertilisers in the last decades has led to numerous problems for mankind and the environment: polluted ground water, decreased soil quality, biodiversity loss and resistance of weed and pest species. To counteract these problems, conventional farming systems will need to become more sustainable. One approach is intercropping, which is common in traditional or low intensity farming, but not in conventional agriculture. Thus, little is known about responses of biotic interactions to intercropping under conventional management. In a cereal-legume intercropping experiment, we found that disease infection was highest in cereal sole crops and weed biomass was highest in legume sole crops, while herbivory was highest in intercrops. Management intensity had significant effects on pathogen infection, herbivory and weed biomass, but results differed between wheat-bean vs barley-pea cropping systems, showing that intercropping in conventional agriculture can reduce antagonistic patterns, but also that plant species must be specifically chosen for optimised performance with respect to reduced external inputs.

AB - The use of pesticides and fertilisers in the last decades has led to numerous problems for mankind and the environment: polluted ground water, decreased soil quality, biodiversity loss and resistance of weed and pest species. To counteract these problems, conventional farming systems will need to become more sustainable. One approach is intercropping, which is common in traditional or low intensity farming, but not in conventional agriculture. Thus, little is known about responses of biotic interactions to intercropping under conventional management. In a cereal-legume intercropping experiment, we found that disease infection was highest in cereal sole crops and weed biomass was highest in legume sole crops, while herbivory was highest in intercrops. Management intensity had significant effects on pathogen infection, herbivory and weed biomass, but results differed between wheat-bean vs barley-pea cropping systems, showing that intercropping in conventional agriculture can reduce antagonistic patterns, but also that plant species must be specifically chosen for optimised performance with respect to reduced external inputs.

U2 - 10.5281/ZENODO.4808649

DO - 10.5281/ZENODO.4808649

M3 - Article in proceedings

VL - 146

BT - Aspects of Applied Biology

T2 - Intercropping for sustainability

Y2 - 18 January 2021 through 20 January 2021

ER -

ID: 286417772