Data from: Crop Sequence affects horseweed density and productivity in oats

Diversified crop rotations can provide many benefits that include greater yield stability, better nutrient cycling, and improved pest management. In a long-term experiment, we observed weed differences in oat that was the result of whether the previous crop was corn or grain sorghum. Horseweed, a common weed in North America, was more prevalent in oat when the previous crop was corn. We speculate that grain sorghum, considered to have allelopathic compounds, suppressed horseweed the following year better than corn. We show that crop sequence within diversified can result in distinct differences in weed presence and production.

Data and Resources

Field Value
accessLevel public
accrualPeriodicity R/P1Y
bureauCode {005:00,005:18}
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier 10.15482/USDA.ADC/27904986.v1
license https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
modified 2025-01-16
programCode {005:040}
publisher Agricultural Research Service
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash ab924f44af85e8caa60364e69bcb5f7ddd856e6a3aa496a4defba3aae059a322
source_schema_version 1.1
temporal 2018-03-23/2020-07-31
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • AmeriGEO
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • CKAN
  • GEO
  • GEOSS
  • National
  • North America
  • United States
  • crop-rotation-strategies
  • horseweed-control
  • ltar
  • nebraska-usa
  • oats-avena-sativa
isopen True
license_id cc-zero
license_title Creative Commons CCZero
license_url http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-zero
maintainer Schmer, Marty, R.
maintainer_email marty.schmer@usda.gov
metadata_created 2025-09-25T13:13:28.751688
metadata_modified 2025-09-25T13:13:28.751695
notes <p dir="ltr">Diversified crop rotations can provide many benefits that include greater yield stability, better nutrient cycling, and improved pest management. In a long-term experiment, we observed weed differences in oat that was the result of whether the previous crop was corn or grain sorghum. Horseweed, a common weed in North America, was more prevalent in oat when the previous crop was corn. We speculate that grain sorghum, considered to have allelopathic compounds, suppressed horseweed the following year better than corn. We show that crop sequence within diversified can result in distinct differences in weed presence and production.</p>
num_resources 1
num_tags 13
title Data from: Crop Sequence affects horseweed density and productivity in oats