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Summers, Haleigh; Karsten, Heather D.; Curran, William; Malcolm, Glenna M. (, Agronomy Journal)null (Ed.)With over 65% of agronomic crops under no-till in Pennsylvania, herbicides are relied on for weed management. To lessen the environmental impact and selection pressure for herbicide resistance, we conducted a nine-year experiment to test herbicide reduction practices in a dairy crop rotation at Rock Springs, PA. The rotation included soybean (Glycine max L.) – corn (Zea mays L.) - 3-year alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) - canola (Brassica napus L.). The following practices were used to reduce herbicide inputs: i. banding residual herbicides over corn and soybean rows and using high-residue inter-row cultivation; ii. seeding a small grain companion crop with alfalfa; iii. plowing once in six years to terminate the perennial forage. These practices were compared with standard herbicide-based weed management (SH) in continuous no-till. We hypothesized: i. There would be more weed biomass in the reduced herbicide treatment (RH), ii. leading to more weeds in RH over time, but iii. the added weed pressure would not affect yield iv. or differences in net return. We sampled weed biomass in soybean, corn, and the first two forage years. In corn and soybean, weed biomass was often greater in RH than SH and increased over the years in the RH treatments. In the forage, weed biomass did not always differ between treatments. Yield and differences in net return were similar in most crops and years. Results suggest that weed management with reduced herbicide inputs supplemented with an integrated approach can be effective but may lead to more weeds over time.more » « less
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