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Published online 1 January 1994
Published in Agron J 86:147-154 (1994)
© 1994 American Society of Agronomy
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Tillage and Weed Management Affects Winter Wheat Yield in an Integrated Pest Management System

F. L. Young*, A. G. Ogg, Jr. and R. I. Papendick

USDA-ARS, Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA 99164-6421

D. C. Thill and J. R. Alldredge

Dep. Plant, Soil, Entomol. Sci., Univ. of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83843
Program in Statistics, Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA 99164-3144

* Corresponding author.

Adoption of conservation practices by U.S. Pacific Northwest growers to meet farm bill legislation for erosion control is limited by the inability to control weeds and other pests in cereal and pulse crops. A 6-yr, 16-ha integrated pest management field study was conducted in the subhumid wheat area of the Pacific Northwest from 1985 through 1991 to develop a crop production system that controls weeds effectively and reduces soil erosion. Farm-size machinery were used to till, plant, and harvest crops grown in either a continuous wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) sequence or a 3-yr rotation of winter wheat-spring barley (Hordeum vulgare L.)-spring pea (Pisum sativum L.) in conservation and conventional tillage systems. Minimum, moderate, and maximum weed management levels were superimposed over each cropping by tillage system. Position of winter wheat within a cropping system influenced yield so that wheat produced more grain following spring pea > spring wheat >> winter wheat. Insects and root diseases were not yield-limiting factors in either conventionally tilled monoculture wheat or no-till wheat in the 3-yr cropping system. Yield of winter wheat in the conventionally tilled, continuous wheat system was similar for all three weed management levels. Yield of winter wheat in conservation tillage systems increased at both the moderate and maximum level of weed management compared with the minimum level. No-till winter wheat planted after either pea or spring wheat at the moderate and maximum weed management levels yielded a minimum of 605 kg ha–1 more than conventionally tilled wheat at the same management levels.


Contribution from the USDA-ARS in cooperation with the Coll. of Agric. and Home Econ. Res. Ctr., Washington State Univ., Pullman, WA. Crop and Soil Sciences Paper No. 9301-17.

Received for publication April 19, 1993.





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The SCI Journals Crop Science Vadose Zone Journal
Journal of Natural Resources
and Life Sciences Education
Soil Science Society of America Journal
Journal of Plant Registrations Journal of
Environmental Quality
The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1994 by the American Society of Agronomy.