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      What good is weed diversity?

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          Summary

          Should the declining diversity of weed communities in conventionally managed arable fields be regarded as a problem? The answer to this question has tended to divide researchers into those whose primary focus is on conserving farmland biodiversity and those whose goals are dictated by weed control and maximising yield. Here, we argue that, regardless of how weeds are perceived, there are common ecological principles that should underpin any approach to managing weed communities, and, based on these principles, increasing in‐field weed diversity could be advantageous agronomically as well as environmentally. We hypothesise that a more diverse weed community will be less competitive, less prone to dominance by highly adapted, herbicide‐resistant species and that the diversity of the weed seedbank will be indicative of the overall sustainability of the cropping system. Common to these hypotheses is the idea that the intensification of agriculture has been accompanied by a homogenisation of cropping systems and landscapes, accounting for both declines in weed diversity and the reduced resilience of cropping systems (including the build‐up of herbicide resistance). As such, weed communities represent a useful indicator of the success of rediversifying systems at multiple scales, which will be a central component of making agriculture and weed control more sustainable.

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          Most cited references15

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          The impact of agricultural intensification and land-use change on the European arable flora.

          The impact of crop management and agricultural land use on the threat status of plants adapted to arable habitats was analysed using data from Red Lists of vascular plants assessed by national experts from 29 European countries. There was a positive relationship between national wheat yields and the numbers of rare, threatened or recently extinct arable plant species in each country. Variance in the relative proportions of species in different threat categories was significantly explained using a combination of fertilizer and herbicide use, with a greater percentage of the variance partitioned to fertilizers. Specialist species adapted to individual crops, such as flax, are among the most threatened. These species have declined across Europe in response to a reduction in the area grown for the crops on which they rely. The increased use of agro-chemicals, especially in central and northwestern Europe, has selected against a larger group of species adapted to habitats with intermediate fertility. There is an urgent need to implement successful conservation strategies to arrest the decline of this functionally distinct and increasingly threatened component of the European flora.
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            Palmer Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri): A Review

            In little over 20 yr, Palmer amaranth has risen from relative obscurity to its current status as one of the most widespread, troublesome, and economically damaging agronomic weeds in the southeastern U.S. Numerous factors have enabled Palmer amaranth to become such a dominant and difficult-to-control weed, including its rapid growth rate, high fecundity, genetic diversity, ability to tolerate adverse conditions, and its facility for evolving herbicide resistance. It is both a serious threat to several U.S. cropping systems and a fascinating model weed. In this paper, we review the growing body of literature on Palmer amaranth to summarize the current state of knowledge on the biology, agricultural impacts, and management of this weed, and we suggest future directions for research.
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              Separating the influence of resource 'availability' from resource 'imbalance' on productivity-diversity relationships.

              One of the oldest and richest questions in biology is that of how species diversity is related to the availability of resources that limit the productivity of ecosystems. Researchers from a variety of disciplines have pursued this question from at least three different theoretical perspectives. Species energy theory has argued that the summed quantities of all resources influence species richness by controlling population sizes and the probability of stochastic extinction. Resource ratio theory has argued that the imbalance in the supply of two or more resources, relative to the stoichiometric needs of the competitors, can dictate the strength of competition and, in turn, the diversity of coexisting species. In contrast to these, the field of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning has argued that species diversity acts as an independent variable that controls how efficiently limited resources are utilized and converted into new tissue. Here we propose that all three of these fields give necessary, but not sufficient, conditions to explain productivity-diversity relationships (PDR) in nature. However, when taken collectively, these three paradigms suggest that PDR can be explained by interactions among four distinct, non-interchangeable variables: (i) the overall quantity of limiting resources, (ii) the stoichiometric ratios of different limiting resources, (iii) the summed biomass produced by a group of potential competitors and (iv) the richness of co-occurring species in a local competitive community. We detail a new multivariate hypothesis that outlines one way in which these four variables are directly and indirectly related to one another. We show how the predictions of this model can be fit to patterns of covariation relating the richness and biomass of lake phytoplankton to three biologically essential resources (N, P and light) in a large number of Norwegian lakes.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                jonathan.storkey@rothamsted.ac.uk
                Journal
                Weed Res
                Weed Res
                10.1111/(ISSN)1365-3180
                WRE
                Weed Research
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                0043-1737
                1365-3180
                23 May 2018
                August 2018
                : 58
                : 4 ( doiID: 10.1111/wre.2018.58.issue-4 )
                : 239-243
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Rothamsted Research Harpenden Hertfordshire UK
                [ 2 ] IA USA
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence: J Storkey, Sustainable Agriculture Sciences, Rothamsted Research, West Common, Harpenden, Hertfordshire AL5 2JQ, UK. Tel: (+44) 1582 938550; E‐mail: jonathan.storkey@ 123456rothamsted.ac.uk
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1094-8914
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3136-5286
                Article
                WRE12310
                10.1111/wre.12310
                6109960
                03f26851-d5f6-4442-8e23-4a6e4e7eeb9d
                © 2018 The Authors. Weed Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Weed Research Society

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 08 February 2018
                : 21 March 2018
                Page count
                Figures: 1, Tables: 0, Pages: 5, Words: 2803
                Funding
                Funded by: NERC
                Award ID: NE/N018125/1 LTS‐M
                Funded by: BBSRC
                Award ID: BBS/E/C/000I0140
                Funded by: Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
                Funded by: Smart Crop Protection
                Award ID: BBS/OS/CP/000001
                Funded by: Black‐grass Resistance Initiative
                Award ID: BB/L001489/1
                Categories
                Insights
                Insights
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                wre12310
                August 2018
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:version=5.4.3 mode:remove_FC converted:23.07.2018

                niche differentiation,herbicide resistance,sustainable intensification,broadbalk experiment,species richness

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