Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.

Weed seeds may maintain their viability when passing through the digestive tract of cattle and can be therefore dispersed by animal movement or the application of manure. Whether different cattle types of the same species can cause differential weed seed fate is largely unknown to us particularly un...

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Main Authors: Salman Rahimi, Hamid Rahimian Mashhadi, Mehdi Dehghan Banadaky, Mohsen Beheshtian Mesgaran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4841545?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b92002c6312f42f9a73beaed3eb16cfb2020-11-25T00:08:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01114e015405710.1371/journal.pone.0154057Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.Salman RahimiHamid Rahimian MashhadiMehdi Dehghan BanadakyMohsen Beheshtian MesgaranWeed seeds may maintain their viability when passing through the digestive tract of cattle and can be therefore dispersed by animal movement or the application of manure. Whether different cattle types of the same species can cause differential weed seed fate is largely unknown to us particularly under non-grazed systems similar to Holstein-Friesian dairy farming. We investigated the effect on the seed survival of four weed species in the digestive tracts of four groups of Holstein cattle: lactating cows, feedlot male calves, dry cows and growing heifers. The weed species used were Cuscuta campestris, Polygonum aviculare, Rumex crispus and Sorghum halepense. Cattle excretion was sampled for recovery and viability of seeds at four 24 hourly intervals after seed intake. The highest seed recovery occurred two days after seed intake in all cattle groups. Averaged over weed species, dry and lactating cows had the lowest and highest seed recovery of 36.4% and 74.4% respectively. No significant differences were observed in seed recovery of the four weed species when their seeds were fed to dry cows. Based on a power model fitted to seed viability data, the estimated time to 50% viability loss after seed intake, over all cattle groups ranged from 65 h (R. crispus) to 76 h (P. aviculare). Recovered seeds from the dung of feedlot male calves showed the highest mortality among cattle groups. Significant correlation was found between seed viability and ruminal pH (r = 0.86; P<0.05). This study shows that management programs aiming to minimize weed infestation caused by livestock should account for the variation amongst cattle groups in seed persistence. Our findings can be used as a guideline for evaluating the potential risk of the spread of weeds via the application of cattle manure.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4841545?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Salman Rahimi
Hamid Rahimian Mashhadi
Mehdi Dehghan Banadaky
Mohsen Beheshtian Mesgaran
spellingShingle Salman Rahimi
Hamid Rahimian Mashhadi
Mehdi Dehghan Banadaky
Mohsen Beheshtian Mesgaran
Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Salman Rahimi
Hamid Rahimian Mashhadi
Mehdi Dehghan Banadaky
Mohsen Beheshtian Mesgaran
author_sort Salman Rahimi
title Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.
title_short Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.
title_full Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.
title_fullStr Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.
title_full_unstemmed Variation in Weed Seed Fate Fed to Different Holstein Cattle Groups.
title_sort variation in weed seed fate fed to different holstein cattle groups.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Weed seeds may maintain their viability when passing through the digestive tract of cattle and can be therefore dispersed by animal movement or the application of manure. Whether different cattle types of the same species can cause differential weed seed fate is largely unknown to us particularly under non-grazed systems similar to Holstein-Friesian dairy farming. We investigated the effect on the seed survival of four weed species in the digestive tracts of four groups of Holstein cattle: lactating cows, feedlot male calves, dry cows and growing heifers. The weed species used were Cuscuta campestris, Polygonum aviculare, Rumex crispus and Sorghum halepense. Cattle excretion was sampled for recovery and viability of seeds at four 24 hourly intervals after seed intake. The highest seed recovery occurred two days after seed intake in all cattle groups. Averaged over weed species, dry and lactating cows had the lowest and highest seed recovery of 36.4% and 74.4% respectively. No significant differences were observed in seed recovery of the four weed species when their seeds were fed to dry cows. Based on a power model fitted to seed viability data, the estimated time to 50% viability loss after seed intake, over all cattle groups ranged from 65 h (R. crispus) to 76 h (P. aviculare). Recovered seeds from the dung of feedlot male calves showed the highest mortality among cattle groups. Significant correlation was found between seed viability and ruminal pH (r = 0.86; P<0.05). This study shows that management programs aiming to minimize weed infestation caused by livestock should account for the variation amongst cattle groups in seed persistence. Our findings can be used as a guideline for evaluating the potential risk of the spread of weeds via the application of cattle manure.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4841545?pdf=render
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