Influence of
Cohorts on Chenopodium album Demography
D. Mulugeta and D. E.
Stoltenberg
Peak germination and emergence of
common lambsquarters usually occur in early to mid-spring, but
both processes can occur during the summer and fall. Seeds
produced by different common lambsquarters cohorts (seedlings that
emerge at nearly the same time) may vary in their dormancy status,
their response to environmental conditions, and their response to
management factors. Therefore, experiments were conducted to
determine the influence of different cohorts on common
lambsquarters demography. Field experiments determined plant
density, biomass, and seed production of different common
lambsquarters cohorts within a crop-free community of annual weed
species that included redroot pigweed, giant foxtail, and
velvetleaf. Common lambsquarters plant density and above-ground
biomass were greater for a mid-May cohort than early June, late
June, mid-July, or early August cohorts, but seed production of
the mid-May and early June cohorts did not differ (about 192,000
seeds m -2 ) and was greater than that of other cohorts (111,500
seeds m -2 or less). In the laboratory, percent germination prior
to stratification (exposure of seeds to low temperatures) was less
for seeds harvested from early May and late May cohorts (A 9%)
than those of mid-June or early July cohorts (@ 75%). After
stratification in the field, percent emergence (seedlings per
number of planted seeds) and mean emergence time were similar
among early May, late May, mid-June, and early July cohort seed
sources, and were not influenced by shallow burial in soil. These
results suggest that recruitment from seeds produced by different
common lambsquarters cohorts is similar, but proportional to the
number of seeds produced by each cohort.
Weed Sci. 46:65-70 (1998) |