Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.

Amaranthus lividus is the most frequently reported troublesome weed in the production of Capsicum annuum in some regions because it is an aggressive invader, difficult to control, and reduces yield significantly. The effects of A. lividus on the growth of C. annuum ‘Baklouti’ were evaluated under gr...

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Main Authors: Omezine Abdessatar, Teixeira da Silva Jaime A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-06-01
Series:Journal of Horticultural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/johr-2016-0010
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spelling doaj-6ff66a7cb3914f4f9943e45837d531372021-09-06T19:40:48ZengSciendoJournal of Horticultural Research2300-50092016-06-01241799110.1515/johr-2016-0010johr-2016-0010Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.Omezine Abdessatar0Teixeira da Silva Jaime A.1Institution of Agricultural Research and Higher Education, Tunis, TunisiaRetired, Miki-cho, JapanAmaranthus lividus is the most frequently reported troublesome weed in the production of Capsicum annuum in some regions because it is an aggressive invader, difficult to control, and reduces yield significantly. The effects of A. lividus on the growth of C. annuum ‘Baklouti’ were evaluated under greenhouse conditions. Three experiments were conducted to determine the effect of A. lividus on the biomass accumulation of C. annuum seedlings for 40 days. In an additive experiment, to one C. annuum seedling and 1, 2, 3 or 4 A. lividus seedlings were grown per pot. The second experiment was established to assess C. annuum intracompetition using from one to six plants per pot as the density. In a replacement experiment, C. annuum and A. lividus seedlings were transplanted into pots with different proportions of both plants (1/5, 2/4, 3/3, 4/2, 5/1). Competition by A. lividus reduced C. annuum plant dry weight by as much as 93%. However, C. annuum had little effect on A. lividus, reducing dry weight by 31.3% at a 5:1 ratio of C. annuum: A. lividus. Relative yield analysis between C. annuum and A. lividus demonstrated the competitive advantage of C. annuum over A. lividus. The relative crowding coefficient of both plants changed significantly in the presence of the other plant, at any ratio. The aggressivity of C. annuum was higher at its lower proportion and C. annuum was more aggressive towards itself than towards A. lividus when its density increased.https://doi.org/10.1515/johr-2016-0010aggressivityallelopathycompetitionrelative crowding coefficientrelative yieldweeds
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Omezine Abdessatar
Teixeira da Silva Jaime A.
spellingShingle Omezine Abdessatar
Teixeira da Silva Jaime A.
Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.
Journal of Horticultural Research
aggressivity
allelopathy
competition
relative crowding coefficient
relative yield
weeds
author_facet Omezine Abdessatar
Teixeira da Silva Jaime A.
author_sort Omezine Abdessatar
title Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.
title_short Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.
title_full Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.
title_fullStr Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.
title_full_unstemmed Competitive Ability of Capsicum annuum L. Relative to the Weed Amaranthus lividus L.
title_sort competitive ability of capsicum annuum l. relative to the weed amaranthus lividus l.
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Horticultural Research
issn 2300-5009
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Amaranthus lividus is the most frequently reported troublesome weed in the production of Capsicum annuum in some regions because it is an aggressive invader, difficult to control, and reduces yield significantly. The effects of A. lividus on the growth of C. annuum ‘Baklouti’ were evaluated under greenhouse conditions. Three experiments were conducted to determine the effect of A. lividus on the biomass accumulation of C. annuum seedlings for 40 days. In an additive experiment, to one C. annuum seedling and 1, 2, 3 or 4 A. lividus seedlings were grown per pot. The second experiment was established to assess C. annuum intracompetition using from one to six plants per pot as the density. In a replacement experiment, C. annuum and A. lividus seedlings were transplanted into pots with different proportions of both plants (1/5, 2/4, 3/3, 4/2, 5/1). Competition by A. lividus reduced C. annuum plant dry weight by as much as 93%. However, C. annuum had little effect on A. lividus, reducing dry weight by 31.3% at a 5:1 ratio of C. annuum: A. lividus. Relative yield analysis between C. annuum and A. lividus demonstrated the competitive advantage of C. annuum over A. lividus. The relative crowding coefficient of both plants changed significantly in the presence of the other plant, at any ratio. The aggressivity of C. annuum was higher at its lower proportion and C. annuum was more aggressive towards itself than towards A. lividus when its density increased.
topic aggressivity
allelopathy
competition
relative crowding coefficient
relative yield
weeds
url https://doi.org/10.1515/johr-2016-0010
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