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Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

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Page 1: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Sustainable low-input cereal production:

required varietal characteristics and crop

diversity

Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Page 2: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

About SUSVAR….

System characteristics: Cereal production Low-input conditions

Aims: Increased stability (yield and quality) Increased resource use efficiency

Main means: Better use of crop genetic diversity

Page 3: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Better use of crop genetic diversity (1)

Selection of suitable genotypesBetter use of available gene-pool for low-input systems

Varieties that are well suited to low-input conditions in general

Varieties that are well suited to specific conditions (environmental conditions by definition more variable than under high-input conditions)

Page 4: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Better use of crop genetic diversity (2)

Use of mixturesUtilize more genotypes simultaneously

Heterogeneity contributes to stability (risk avoidance) Generation of added value:

• Facilitation• Competition

Page 5: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Crop - environment: mutual interaction

environment

Crop A

Page 6: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Facilitation: positive effect

environment

cropCrop A Crop B

+

Page 7: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Facilitative production principle: insects

Page 8: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Competition: negative influence

environment

cropCrop A Crop B

-

Page 9: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Competitive relations are important

Page 10: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Competition also the basis for over-yielding

Competitive production principle

intra-specific competition > inter-specific competition

Niche-differentiation or complementarity

better exploitation of available resources

Page 11: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Facilitative production principle: weeds

Facilitation

(the creation of a weed free environment)

is through

Competition

(suppression of weeds by other crop)

Challenge: avoid other crop from developing into a weed.

Page 12: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Facilitative production principle: weeds

Page 13: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Working group plant-plant interaction

Crop – weed interaction Weed suppression Which traits General or environment specific Easy screening procedures

Page 14: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

In case of mixtures

Crop – crop interaction Yield stability

• Difference in stress-tolerance

Productivity• Niche differentiation• Intra-specific competition > inter-specific competition

Page 15: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Weed suppression of mixtures

Crop – crop – weed interaction How to maximize weed suppression?

• Combine most competitive cultivars• Maximize complementarity

– Complementarity in resource use and acquisition– Complementarity in weed suppression mechanism

Page 16: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Currently many different questions ….

What do we want to obtain with mixtures?

(stability, productivity, weed suppression, others)

How can added value of mixtures be obtained?

(what is the best strategy)

How to select individual varieties for their performance in mixtures?

Page 17: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Time to decide on where to go …

Page 18: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions
Page 19: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

WG 1Genetics & Breeding

WG 3Plant – Soil Interactions

WG 4Plant – PlantInteractions

WG 5Plant Disease

Complex

WG 6Variety testing &

certification

Organisation of activities and reciprocal benefits

WG 2Biostatistics

Page 20: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Facilitative production principle: diseases

Page 21: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Plant-plant interaction

Main issues: Productivity Stability Weed suppression

Page 22: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Learning-objectives

To familiarise with options for evaluating: productivity competitive relations

within intercropping systems To be able to value the various methodologies To learn the relationship between some indices of

relative competitive ability

Page 23: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Multiple cropping

Growing two or more crops on the same field in a year

- sequential cropping

- relay intercropping

- full intercropping

time

Page 24: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Reasons for intercropping

Better use of available resources

(land, labour, light, water, nutrients) Reduction in pest pressure + associated damage

(diseases, insects, weeds) Socio-economic

(greater stability, risk avoidance, food/cash crops) Sustainability

(erosion, soil fertility)

Page 25: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Facilitative production principle: diseases

Causal organism:Magnaporthe grisea

two phases:vegetative stageLeaf blast

reproductive phaseNeck or panicle blast

Page 26: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Intercropping as weed management component

manual weeding

Transplanting Harvest

weed-free period

Leek monoculture

Leek-Celery Intercrop

Weeds

Weeds

weed-free period

mechanical weeding

mechanical weeding

Page 27: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Competition the basis for over-yielding?

Niche-differentiation

better exploitation of available resources separation in time (relay) separation in space (rooting depth) different resource capture abilities different growth requirements

Page 28: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Key to evaluation of intercrop productivity

Quantification of competitive relations

Example:

Two-species mixture (sp 1 - sp 2)

How many competition coefficients?

Page 29: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Key to evaluation of intercrop productivity

Quantification of competitive relations

Example:

Two-species mixture (sp 1 - sp 2)

How many competition coefficients?

2 intraspecific competition coefficients: b11, b22

2 interspecific competition coefficients: b12, b21

Page 30: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Intraspecific competition

Y=N/(b0+b1N) W=Y/N=1/(b0+b1N) 1/W=b0+b1N

Page 31: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Measure of intraspecific competition

1/W1=b10+b11N1

b10 [plant/g]

b11 [m2/g]

b11/b10 [m2/plant]

crowding coefficient (de Wit) ecological neighbourhood area (Antonovics & Levin)

Page 32: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Intercropping: intra and interspecific

1/W1=b10+b11N1+ b12N2

b11/b12 relative competitive ability

What does this value learn us?

Page 33: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Intercrop productivity

1/W1=b10+b11N1+ b12N2

and

1/W2=b20+b22N2+ b21N1

b11/b12 and b22/b21

Niche differentiation index (NDI):

b11/b12 * b22/b21= (b11*b22)/(b12*b21)

NDI =1,<1,>1

Page 34: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

How can we determine these indices?

Page 35: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Evaluation in practice Experiment with three treatments:

Monoculture of species 1 Y1,mono

Monoculture of species 2 Y2,mono

Mixture of species 1 and 2 Y1,mix, Y2,mix

Calculation of Relative Yield RY1 =Y1,mix/Y1,mono

RY2 =Y2,mix/Y2,mono

Land Equivalent Ratio (LER) LER = RY1 + RY2 relative land area under sole crops required to produce the yields

achieved in intercropping

Page 36: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Two basic designs

Additive design

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x 0 x 0 x

species 1 species 2 mixture

Page 37: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Two basic designs

Replacement design

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x

0 0 0 0 x x x x 0 x 0 x

species 1 species 2 mixture

Page 38: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Replacement design

Overall density constant Results represented in a

replacement diagram LER generally replaced by

Relative Yield Total (RYT) Relative crowding coefficient

(k) to express competitive relations:

k12=(1-z1)/(w11/w12-z1)

z1=fraction species 1 0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

0 0.5 1

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

k12=0.58

k21=1.93

Page 39: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Replacement design

k intrasp/intersp comp. Similar to b11/b12?

k*k related to intercrop

productivity =1, >1, <1 Similar to NDI? 0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

0 0.5 1

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

k12=0.58

k12=0.58

k21=1.93

Page 40: Sustainable low-input cereal production: required varietal characteristics and crop diversity Working Group 4: plant-plant interactions

Excercises

Complete calculations on two intercrops grown at two different densities in replacement and additive design

Focus on: What is the difference between outcomes from a

replacement and an additive design? What is the difference between relative crowding

coefficient (k) and the ratio of competition coefficients (e.g. b11/b12)?