Arthropod communities related to different mixtures of oil [Glycine max L. Merr.] and essential oil [Artemisia annua L.] crops

Plants can host many herbivores and their natural enemies during their growth cycles. For this reason, changes in the relative abundance of crop and weed plants in a monocropping system as well as different crop plants in an intercropping system may produce great bottom up impacts in the specific and functional structure of spontaneous communities of arthropods. The hypothesis of this study was that the combination of two contrasting species, soybean [Glycine max, Fabaceae, N 2 fixing plant] and annual wormwood [Artemisia annua, Asteraceae, VOCs plant], would be related to different spontaneous communities of arthropods depending on the proportion of each species, and this would favor crop biodiversity without compromising crop production. The objectives of the study were: [a] to analyze the differences of spontaneous communities of arthropods related to different soybean [S]-annual wormwood [W] mixtures, using standard crop management for S production in Argentina, [b] to determine S and W total biomass and W essential oil content and yield and, [c] to analyze the relationship between arthropod communities and crop productivity. Factorial field experiments with 3 replications were done during 2006 and 2007. S density was kept constant [40plantsm -2] and different W densities [plantsm -2] were added. Treatments were pure S, S+2W, S+4W, S+8W and pure W [8plantsm -2]. Arthropods were sampled at soybean full flowering and were classified in functional groups as herbivores and non-herbivores. S and W total and relative biomass and W essential oil content and yield from leaves and inflorescences were estimated in reproductive stage. Arthropod morphospecies abundance and richness were determined for each treatment. Data were analyzed using uni [ANOVA] and multivariate [CCA] techniques. Arthropods belonging to 7 orders presented a total richness of 48 morphospecies in 2006 and 36 in 2007, while total abundance was 379 in 2006 and 318 in 2007. The proportion of non-herbivores was higher than the proportion of herbivores. Different arthropod communities were observed according to each treatment. No differences were found among treatments in S+W and S total biomass production, while W total biomass and essential oil yield were both different among treatments. Relative biomass production of S and W was the main explanatory variable related to the contrast of arthropod communities between pure annual wormwood [W] and the rest of the treatments. Annual wormwood could be used as an accompanying essential oil crop or left as a weed in the densities tested in this work, favoring biodiversity and, eventually, pest management without compromising soybean crop yield.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lenardis, Adriana Ester, Morvillo, Claudia Mariela, Gil, Alejandra, De la Fuente, Elba Beatriz
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:CROP, HERBIVORES, VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS [VOCS], WEED, ARGENTINA, ARTEMISIA ANNUA, ASTERACEAE, BIOMASS PRODUCTIONS, CROP MANAGEMENTS, CROP PLANTS, CROP PRODUCTION, CROP PRODUCTIVITY, CROP YIELD, EXPLANATORY VARIABLES, FIELD EXPERIMENT, FUNCTIONAL STRUCTURE, GLYCINE MAX, GROWTH CYCLE, MONOCROPPING, MORPHO-SPECIES, NATURAL ENEMIES, PEST MANAGEMENT, RELATIVE ABUNDANCE, REPRODUCTIVE STAGE, TOTAL BIOMASS, WEED PLANTS, AMINO ACIDS, ANIMALS, BIODIVERSITY, BIOMASS, CROPS, CULTIVATION, FUNCTIONAL GROUPS, NITROGEN FIXATION, PLANTS [BOTANY], VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS, WELL STIMULATION, ESSENTIAL OILS, ARTHROPOD, BIOCONTROL AGENT, BIOLOGICAL CONTROL, COMMUNITY STRUCTURE, DICOTYLEDON, ESSENTIAL OIL, EXPERIMENTAL STUDY, FLOWERING, HERBIVORE, HOST PLANT, HYPOTHESIS TESTING, INTERCROPPING, MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS, NATURAL ENEMY, SOYBEAN, VARIANCE ANALYSIS, VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUND, ARTHROPODA, FABACEAE,
Online Access:http://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=46781
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