Impact of field margin vegetation and herbage removal on ingrowing and anemochorous weeds.

2006 
: This research studies the effect of different ways to establish and to maintain unfertilised field margins on the development of potential weed plants and seed dispersal into adjacent crops. Plant communities in field margins either developed spontaneously or were sown with different seed mixtures of grasses and forbs. Margins were mown twice a year and the cuttings were either removed or not. Three years after establishment, the importance of important weeds Elymus repens, Cirsium arvense and Urtica dioica was significantly higher in the unsown community or when cuttings were not removed after mowing. Seed dispersal from the margin into adjacent crops was important in the unsown community during the first year after establishment. Between 82% and 99% of the seeds were disseminated within a distance of 4 m from the margin strip. In order to minimize the dissemination of weed species and invasion by noxious vegetatively propagated weeds it is recommended to establish a field margin by sowing and to remove the cuttings after each mowing cut.
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