1. Arable Weeds and Management in Europe
- Author
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Alicia Cirujeda, José Luis González-Andújar, Guillaume Fried, Matthias Schumacher, Francesco Vidotto, Denise Fu Dostatny, Jana Bürger, Christoph von Redwitz, Helen Metcalfe, Michael Glemnitz, Sandrine Petit, Gyula Pinke, Jordi Izquierdo, Eva Hernández Plaza, Michaela Kolářová, Lena Ulber, Silvia Fogliatto, Bärbel Gerowitt, Jevgenija Ņečajeva, Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire de l'alimentation, de l'environnement et du travail (ANSES), and German Research Foundation
- Subjects
[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Biodiversity ,segetal plant ,Segetal plant ,Arable weeds ,Malezas ,arable weed ,Vegetation-plot database ,Transect ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,agriculture ,2. Zero hunger ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Agroforestry ,business.industry ,agriculture, arable weed, Europe, management, segetal plant, vegetation-plot database ,Agriculture ,Vegetation ,vegetation-plot database ,15. Life on land ,Weed control ,Bases de datos ,Management ,Tierras cultivadas ,Europe ,Geography ,Taxon ,Arable land ,[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology ,Weed ,business ,Europa ,management - Abstract
“Arable Weeds and Management in Europe” is a collection of weed vegetation records from arable fields in Europe, initiated within the Working Group Weeds and Biodiversity of the European Weed Research Society (EWRS). Vegetation-plot data from this scientific community was not previously contributed to databases. We aim to prove the usefulness of collection for large scale studies through some first analyses. We hope to assure other weed scientists who have signalled willingness to share data, and plan to construct a full data base, making the data available for easy sharing. Presently, the collection has over 60,000 records, taken between 1996 and 2015. Many more studies for potential inclusion exist. Data originate mostly from studies exploring the effect of agricultural management on weed vegetation. The database is accompanied with extensive meta-data on crop and weed management on the surveyed fields. The criteria for inclusion were a minimum amount of information on the cultivated crop, and a georeference. Most fields were surveyed repeatedly, i.e. transects, multiple random plots, or repeated visits. All surveys aimed to record the complete vegetation on the plots. Sometimes, taxa were identified only to genus level, due to survey dates very early in the vegetation period. Plant taxonomy is standardized to the Euro+Med PlantBase., B. was funded by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under the grant number BU 3097/1-1.
- Published
- 2020