Weed seed inactivation in soil mesocosms via biosolarization with mature compost and tomato processing waste amendments
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/110666DOI: 10.1002/ps.4354
ISSN: 1526-4998
ISSN: 1526-498X
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Achmon, Yigal; Fernández Bayo, Jesús Dionisio; Harrold, Duff R.; Su, Joey; McCurry, Dlinca G.; Hernandez, Katie; Dahlquist-Willard, Ruth M.; Stapleton, James J.; VanderGheynst, Jean S.; Simmons, Christopher W.Editorial
Wiley
Materia
Fumigation Biosolarization Weeds
Date
2016-07-08Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Yigal Achmon, Jesús D. Fernández-Bayo, Duff R. Harrold, Joey Su, Dlinka G. McCurry, Katie Hernandez, Ruth M. Dahlquist-Willard, James J. Stapleton, Jean S. VanderGheynst, and Christopher W. Simmons. 2016. Weed seed inactivation in soil mesocosms via biosolarization with mature compost and tomato processing waste amendments. Pest Management Science. Volume 73, Issue 5. 862–873.
Sponsorship
California Department of Pesticide Regulation (14-PML-R004); National Science Foundation (CBET-1438694j)Abstract
Background: Biosolarization is a fumigation alternative that combines passive solar heating with amendment-driven soil microbial activity to temporarily create antagonistic soil conditions, such as elevated temperature and acidity, that can inactivate weed seeds and other pest propagules. The aim of this study was to use a mesocosm-based field trial to assess soil heating, pH, volatile fatty acid accumulation and weed seed inactivation during biosolarization. Results: Biosolarization for 8 days using 2% mature green waste compost and 2 or 5% tomato processing residues in the soil resulted in accumulation of volatile fatty acids in the soil, particularly acetic acid, and >95% inactivation of Brassica nigra and Solanum nigrum seeds. Inactivation kinetics data showed that near complete weed seed inactivation in soil was achieved within the first 5 days of biosolarization. This was significantly greater than the inactivation achieved in control soils that were solar heated without amendment or were amended but not solar heated. Conclusion: The composition and concentration of organic matter amendments in soil significantly affected volatile fatty acid accumulation at various soil depths during biosolarization. Combining solar heating with organic matter amendment resulted in accelerated weed seed inactivation compared with either approach alone.





