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No-till seeding of cold season forage on native pasture under herbicides application: II. Botanical composition

No-till seeding of winter species may reduce seasonal fluctuations of forage production of natural grasslands. An experiment of herbicide application on native grasses was conducted for four years, on a fine-loamy, mixed Mollic Hapludalf in northern of Uruguay to introduce winter forage and study the impact of herbicide on botanical composition of grass field. The experimental design was split-splitplot with three randomized blocks, with types and dosis of herbicides (gliphosate 1L ha-1, gliphosate 4L ha-1, paraquat 3L ha-1 and a check without herbicides) as main treatments, applied in 1994. The application or not of the same treatments in 1995 constituted the splitplots, and their reapplication or not in 1996 constituted the split-splitplots. The botanical composition in the fall of 1998 showed that there were only six species in the treatment with the higher gliphosate rate applied every year, meanwhile in the check there were eleven species. Andropogon lateralis, Paspalum notatum, Conyza bonariensis, Eryngium horridum, Desmodium incanum, Cyperus sp. and Digitaria sp. were responsible for 90% of the total botanical composition of the grassland. There was a substitution of annual for perennial species due to the most agressive herbicide treatment.

forage production; no-till; native grasslands


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