Productivity
and Intraspecific Competitive Ability of a Velvetleaf (Abutilon
theophrasti) Biotype Resistant to Atrazine
J. A. Gray, D.
E. Stoltenberg, and N. E. Balke
Studies were conducted to
determine the relative competitive ability and productivity of
an atrazine-resistant biotype (WRB1) and an atrazine-susceptible
accession (WSA1) of velvetleaf from Wisconsin. Noncompetitive
productivity studies conducted in the field and greenhouse
during 1992 and 1993 showed that instantaneous relative growth
rate, net assimilation rate, and leaf area ratio of the WRB1
biotype and WSA1 accession were similar. There were no
consistent differences between the WRB1 biotype and WSA1
accession in plant height, shoot dry biomass, and leaf area
overtime. The WRB1 biotype and WSA1 accession did not differ in
noncompetitive seed yield. A replacement series experiment
conducted in the field in 1992 and 1993 showed that the WRB1
biotype and WSA1 accession did not differ in shoot dry biomass
or seed yield at densities of 36, 64, and 100 plants m -2 .
Results suggest that resistance to atrazine has not reduced the
noncompetitive productivity or the intraspecific competitive
ability of the WRB1 biotype relative to the WSA1 accession.
Thus, even in the absence of atrazine selection intensity, the
frequency of atrazine resistance gene(s) is unlikely to decrease
in the velvetleaf population from which the WRB1 biotype was
selected.
Weed Sci. 43:619-626 (1995) |