AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists are studying how certain common weeds affect crops and soil for better farming practices.
  • They found that different parts of the plant (like roots and leaves) have different effects, with leaves being stronger at suppressing other plants.
  • The study showed that the way these weeds break down in the soil can change depending on the conditions and can help or hurt crop growth, so farmers need to manage weeds carefully.

Article Abstract

The potential of the most prevalent weeds should be characterized biologically and chemically in infected soil and crops for sustainable agriculture. Therefore, the allelopathic potential of L. and L. weeds were compared via leachates, root exudates, decayed residues in soil, and the decomposition in water pathways. Chemical measurements were taken on wheat ( L.), and soil decomposed solution. Based on EC, the allelopathic effect of leachates were higher in aboveground parts than in subterranean parts, influenced by plant parts and concentrations. The root exudates show EC by 655.9 μg. ml for and 625.66 μg. ml for in the seedling biomass fresh weights of . The systematic inhibition by decayed residues was affected by plant types, concentration, and time and correlated with soil parameters and crop performance. The decomposition rate was higher under aerobic conditions than anaerobic conditions, with the inhibition pattern showing the reverse trend. These finding highlight the importance of environmental conditions in mediating allelopathic effects. The highest quantities of phenolic acids determined by LC-ES/MS in decomposed solutions were citric acid, with concentrations of 7.71 and 13.31 μg/ml in under aerobic conditions, and coumaric acid, with concentrations of 9.21 and 16.99 μg/ml in under aerobic conditions. The allelopathic potentials of and may play a crucial role in crop growth and soil parameters. In general weed residues can suppress crop growth and negatively affect soil parameters based on their quantity and type, therefore they should be managed carefully for sustainable crop production.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11437849PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e38007DOI Listing

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