Relative importance of region, seasonality and weed management practice effects on the functional structure of weed communities in French vineyards - INRAE - Institut national de recherche pour l’agriculture, l’alimentation et l’environnement Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment Année : 2022

Relative importance of region, seasonality and weed management practice effects on the functional structure of weed communities in French vineyards

Résumé

Highlights: • Region (53%) and season (28%) explained most of Community Weighted Means variance. • Weed management practices explained 19% of Community Weighted Means variance. • Chemically weeded communities showed trait values of ruderal strategies. • Mowed plots were associated with more competitive communities. • Tillage favoured weed communities with higher lateral spread ability. Abstract: Winegrowers have diversified their weed management practices over the last two decades changing the structure and the composition of weed communities. Complementary to taxonomic studies, trait-based approaches are promising ways for a better understanding of weed community responses to environmental and agronomic filters. In the present study, the impacts of climate, soil characteristics, seasons and weed management practices (chemical weeding, tillage and mowing) were assessed on weed communities from 46 plots in three French wine growing regions (Champagne, Languedoc and Rhone valley). These agro-environmental gradients structuring weed communities according to their combinations of traits were highlighted using multivariate analysis (RLQ). The impacts of these filters on Community Weighted Means (CWM) and Community Weighted Variance (CWV) of weed communities were analysed using mixed and null modelling. Our results showed that spatio-temporal and weed management practice variables explained from 13% to 48% of the total variance of CWM (specific leaf area, maximum height, seed mass, flowering onset and duration and lateral spread). Region, seasonality and management practices explained 53%, 28% and 19% of CWM marginal variance, respectively. Weed management impacted CWM and CWV through two main gradients: (i) a soil disturbance gradient with high mechanical disturbance of soil in tilled plots and low mechanical disturbance in chemically weeded plots and (ii) a vegetation cover gradient with high vegetation abundance in mowed plots compared to barer soils in tilled and chemically weeded plots. In Languedoc, chemical weeding filtered weed communities with ruderal strategy trait values (low seed mass, small-stature) while mowed communities were more competitive (higher seed mass, higher stature and lower SLA). In Languedoc and Champagne, tillage favoured communities with high seed mass that increases the viability of buried seeds and high lateral spread values associated to the ability to resprout after tillage. This study demonstrated that trait-based approaches can be successfully applied to perennial cropping systems such as vineyards, in order to understand community assembly to better guide weed management practices.
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Dates et versions

hal-04024218 , version 1 (10-03-2023)

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Marie-Charlotte Bopp, Elena Kazakou, Aurélie Metay, Guillaume Fried. Relative importance of region, seasonality and weed management practice effects on the functional structure of weed communities in French vineyards. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 2022, 330, pp.107892. ⟨10.1016/j.agee.2022.107892⟩. ⟨hal-04024218⟩
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