Database Menu
About CropLife
About our industry
Press room
Resource Centre
Impact Areas

Use Advanced Search to filter by crop, trait, country and more.
    Home / Benefits of plant science / Biotechnology Benefits & Safety Database / Weeds in fields with contrasting conventional and genetically modified herbicide-tolerant crops. II. Effects on individual species

    Weeds in fields with contrasting conventional and genetically modified herbicide-tolerant crops. II. Effects on individual species (2003)

    This paper is relevant to the Agronomic categories in the following areas:

    Crops:Sugar Beet, Maize, and Oilseed Rape
    Traits:Herbicide Tolerance
    Countries:United Kingdom
    Regions:EU
    ImpactAreas:Agronomic

    Abstract or Summary:

    We compared the effects of the management of genetically modified herbicide-tolerant (GMHT) and conventional beet, maize and spring oilseed rape on 12 weed species. We sampled the seedbank before and after cropping. During the season we counted plants and measured seed rain and biomass. Ratios of densities were used to calculate emergence, survival, reproduction and seedbank change. Treatments significantly affected the biomass of six species in beet, eight in maize and five in spring oilseed rape. The effects were generally consistent, with biomass lower in GMHT beet and spring oilseed rape and higher in GMHT maize. With few exceptions, emergence was higher in GMHT crops. Subsequent survival was significantly lowered for eight species in beet and six in spring oilseed rape in the GMHT treatments. It was increased for five species in maize and one in spring oilseed rape. Significant effects on seedbank change were found for four species. However, for many species in beet and spring oilseed rape (19 out of 24 cases), seed densities were lower in the seedbank after GMHT cropping. These differences compounded over time would result in large decreases in population densities of arable weeds. In maize, populations may increase.

    Paper reproduced by permission of The Royal Society

    Download Weeds in fields with contrasting conventional and genetically modified herbicide-tolerant crops. II. Effects on individual species

    * CropLife International gives full acknowledgement to the author and publisher of this article (see download for details).