Crop Science Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published online 16 January 2008
Published in Crop Sci 48:331-342 (2008)
© 2008 Crop Science Society of America
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Crop Species Diversity Affects Productivity and Weed Suppression in Perennial Polycultures under Two Management Strategies

Valentín D. Picassoa,*, E. Charles Brummerd, Matt Liebmana, Philip M. Dixonb and Brian J. Wilseyc

a Dep. of Agronomy, Iowa State Univ., Ames, IA 50011
b Dep. of Statistics, Iowa State Univ., Ames, IA 50011
c Dep. of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State Univ., Ames, IA 50011
d Dep. of Crop and Soil Sciences, Center for Applied Genetic Technologies, Univ. of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602. This journal paper of the Iowa Agric. and Home Econ. Exp. Stn., Ames, IA, Project No. 6631, was supported by the Hatch Act and State of Iowa funds

* Corresponding author (vpicasso{at}iastate.edu).

Species diversity can increase natural grasslands productivity but the effect of diversity in agricultural systems is not well understood. Our objective was to measure the effects of species composition, species richness, and harvest management on crop and weed biomass in perennial herbaceous polycultures. In 2003, 49 combinations of seven species (legumes, C3 and C4 grasses) including all monocultures and selected two to six species polycultures were sown in small plots at two Iowa, USA, locations in a replicated field design. Plots were split in half and managed with either one or three harvests in each of 2004 and 2005. Biomass increased log-linearly with species richness in all location-management environments and the response was not different between managements. Polycultures outyielded monocultures on average by 73%. The most productive species in monoculture for each management best explained the variation in biomass productivity. The biomass of plots containing this species did not increase with richness in most environments but biomass of plots without this species increased log-linearly in all cases. Weed biomass decreased exponentially with richness in all environments. On average, increasing species richness in perennial herbaceous polycultures increased productivity and weed suppression, but well-adapted species produced high biomass yield regardless of richness.

Abbreviations: A1, Ames–one harvest • A3, Ames–three harvests • AIC, Akaike's Information Criterion • B1, Boone–one harvest • B3, Boone–three harvests • ISU, Iowa State University


This research was cofunded by grants from Raymond Baker Center for Plant Breeding at Iowa State University, Ames, IA, to E.C. Brummer; Fulbright-Uruguay Graduate Fellowship, NCR-SARE Graduate Student Project No. GNC05-055, and Natural Systems Agriculture Graduate Fellowship from The Land Institute, Salina, KS, to V. Picasso. The authors would like to thank Mark Smith and several students in the ISU forage breeding lab for field and lab assistance, and the Graduate Program in Sustainable Agriculture at Iowa State University.

All rights reserved. No part of this periodical may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Permission for printing and for reprinting the material contained herein has been obtained by the publisher.

Received for publication April 23, 2007.





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