It's unlikely that allelopathy will totally replace herbicides in weed control. |
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Secreted secondary compounds are positioned to be leached to the soil, in some cases for the purpose of contributing to allelopathy. |
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It can provide a potent mixture of allelopathy and shade for the soil, inhibiting weed seed germination. |
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The effect on seedling germination is a well-known phenomenon in allelopathy. |
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He speculated that competition for light or water or allelopathy might be factors limiting the growth of seedlings within native populations. |
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This is due to a phenomenon known as allelopathy where there are chemicals in the leaves, flowers and stems of the flamboyant which inhibit the growth of other plants. |
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Known information on whether the residues of the organism can have an ecological effect, such as allelopathy, on other organisms should be provided. |
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Potential biological control of weed in rice fields by allelopathy of dwarf lilyturf plants. |
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Some crops such as rye or canola can have detrimental effects on following crops of corn unless properly managed due to allelopathy or the effects on microorganisms such as mycorrhyzae. |
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Ideally, growers will vary cover crops from year to year to take advantage of different botanical characteristics such as rooting patterns, allelopathy and nitrogen fixation. |
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One of the key functions of caffeine in the plants that produce it is allelopathy – the ability to reduce competition from surrounding species by suppressing their growth. |
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Fujii suggests that with respect to Namoi woolly pod vetch, allelopathy is mainly due to the chemicals cyanamide and L-cyanoalanine. |
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Allelopathy phenomena also play a part in crop production losses, but it is impossible to make the difference between the mechanism of this phenomenon and competition in the field. |
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Allelopathy is an adaptation plants use to chemically compete with other plants and can occur both interspecifically and intraspecifically. |
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