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1999 Integrated Pest Management Annual ReportSnapbeans, Weeds and IPM
Weeds do not exist in isolation they can influence other organisms within crop environments. Putting the research spotlight on weed biology can aid development of better integrated pest management practices for snapbeans, a crop widely grown in the Midwest.
Reduced tillage–high residue systems can prevent soil erosion, improve soil tilth, and suppress weeds in vegetable crops. By changing the crop environment, these alternative production systems also can affect other pests and may lower crop yields. Recent small-plot research with cereal rye cover crops has shown that these systems provide effective weed control through midseason, decrease the incidence of white mold disease on snapbean, and reduce some insect pest problems (that is, leafhoppers). Snapbean yield was reduced in reduced-tillage systems due to soil compaction and allelo-chemical release by the rye. The use of strip tillage was found to reduce much of the adverse effects of cover crop mulches on vegetable crop yields, but additional modifications are needed to reduce risk and increase snapbean yields in reduced-tillage rye mulch systems.
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College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences Crop Sciences | Entomology Natural Resources & Environmental Sciences Illinois Natural History Survey |
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