Intercropping Winter Lupin And Triticale Increases Weed Suppression And Total Yield

AGRICULTURE-BASEL(2020)

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Abstract
Lupin (Lupinussp.) produces protein-rich grains, but its adoption in cropping systems suffers from both its low competitive ability against weeds and its high yield variability. Compared with legume sole cropping, grain legume-cereal intercropping benefits include better weed suppression and higher yield and yield stability. However, the potential of enhancing crop competitive ability against weeds in additive winter grain legume-cereal intercrops is not well-known, and this potential in long crop cycles is even less studied. We studied how intercropping with a triticale (xTriticosecale) alters weed biomass and productivity of winter white lupin (Lupinus albusL.). The experimental setup consisted of eleven sites during a two-year period in western France. In each site-year, winter white lupin sole cropping was compared to winter white lupin-triticale intercropping in an additive sowing design. We found that intercropping reduced weed biomass at lupin flowering by an average of 63%. The rapid growth and high soil N acquisition of triticale compensated for the low competitive ability of lupin against weeds until lupin flowering. Competition from triticale in the intercrop reduced lupin grain yield (-34%), but intercropping produced a higher total grain yield (+37%) than did lupin sole cropping while maintaining the total protein grain yield.
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Key words
intercropping, lupin, triticale, weeds, legumes, nitrogen
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