Output list
Journal article
Published 2026
Soil & tillage research, 258, 106997
Deep sand soils are inherently fragile with surface layers that are very low in organic matter and clay. Previous studies demonstrate that strategic deep tillage such as soil inversion and deep soil mixing can increase crop production on these soils in Southern Australia. However, the majority of the organic matter and nutrients are concentrated in the top organically stained layer and deep tillage incorporates 50-60 % of the organic layer into the subsoil below 200 mm. The physical composition of the soil (percentage of sand, silt, clay and organic matter) and the chemical properties of the soil (pH, nutrient levels, cation exchange capacity) can strongly influence the soil adsorption of trifluralin. Modest levels of organic matter and clay particles in the topsoil particularly following deep tillage equate to the scant attenuation of herbicides on sandy textured soils. Soil samples (0-100 mm) were collected from three experimental sites; two Arenic Solonetz soils near Esperance and one Arenic Arenosol soil near Geraldton in Western Australia. At all three sites, three experimental treatments were sampled; control (no tillage), deep mixed with a spader to 350 mm and soil inversion with a mouldboard plough to 350 mm. Soil samples were taken on two growing seasons post tillage at Geraldton, three post tillage at Esperance TJM and twelve post tillage at Esperance E1. Tillage reduced the measured soil-liquid partition coefficient (Kd) of trifluralin (p <= 0.05) at all three experimental sites. A greenhouse bioassay was developed to determine if soil changes from strategic tillage at one of the Esperance sites and the Geraldton site could be directly related to herbicide bioavailability at two of the experimental sites. Intact cores were used to maintain integrity of the field soils. Cores from both field sites demonstrated that soil inversion reduced the effective dose of trifluralin (p <0.01) for the bioassay species Lens culinaris. Together these experiments illustrate that strategic deep tillage can increase the bioavailability of trifluralin. These findings offer a valuable insight into the soil behaviour of trifluralin and can help farmers estimate the risk of phytotoxicity based on measurable soil characteristics.
Journal article
Adverse consequences of herbicide residues on legumes in dryland agriculture
Published 2024
Field crops research, 308, 109271
Context or problem
Selective herbicides control weeds in cereal crops and break down over time, allowing safe planting of legumes in the following years. However due to climatic inconsistencies and changing farming practices, this is not always the case, and residues can inhibit formation of legume/rhizobia symbioses.
Objective or research question
The objectives were to determine whether: i) exposure to triasulfuron, even at extremely low levels, reduces shoot and root growth and nodulation of five diverse and widely sown legume pasture cultivars in Australian farming systems; and ii) sowing legumes prior to recommended plant-back criteria being met for chlorsulfuron, triasulfuron herbicide, clopyralid, and pyroxasulfone herbicides results in unacceptable damage to subsequently sown pasture and crop legumes, causing reduced root and shoot growth, nodulation and N fixation.
Methods
A series of glasshouse and field experiments explored herbicide residue impact on commonly used legumes in dryland farming systems.
Results
A glasshouse study determined triasulfuron at concentration 0.000225 g a.i/ha, a (1/100,000) dilution of the label rate caused significant (p < 0.001) decrease in nodule count, root length, root, shoot weight for Trifolium spumosum cv. Bartolo and T. subterraneum cv. Dalkeith, and at 0.225 g a.i/ha and 2.25 g a.i/ha for all five cultivars tested. A bioassay assessed T. subterraneum cv. Dalkeith health when grown in field soil-cores taken 4, 7 and 10 months after herbicide application (chlorsulfuron, triasulfuron, clopyralid and pyroxasulfone) to a wheat crop. For all three, herbicide residues significantly decreased (p < 0.001) nodule number, shoot weight, root length and whole plant weight of T. subterraneum cv. Dalkeith compared to control. A field experiment assessed nodulation of five pasture and two crop legumes sown dry (dormant summer sowing), or following rainfall 10.5 months after initial herbicide application. Nodulation of all legume cultivars decreased in plots treated with clopyralid. Chlorsulfuron decreased nodulation for all cultivars except T. glanduliferum and T. subterraneum. Triasulfuron reduced nodulation for all cultivars except Ornithopus sativus and T. spumosum. Pyroxasulfone decreased nodulation of Biserrula pelecinus cv. Casbah and Lupinus angustifolius cv. Mandalup.
Conclusions
Herbicide residues from preceding cereal crops reduced fitness and symbiotically fixed N in subsequently sown pasture or crop legumes.
Implications or significance
Our study highlighted label plant-back recommendations should be strictly adhered to, despite conflict with modern farming approaches of dry or early sowing) to combat climate change. This outcome may consequently lower profitability and increase the carbon footprint of farming systems.
Journal article
Increasing wheat proteins sustainably by rotation with forage legumes
Published 2023
Agronomy for sustainable development, 43, 5, 56
Wheat proteins provide around 20% of all human dietary protein, but their end-use qualities are determined by the form and quantity of nitrogen in the endosperm. In the developed world, there is a heavy reliance in grain production on nitrogen supplied from synthetic fertilisers, and this fertiliser can contribute up to 50% of the on-farm emissions of greenhouse gasses in agriculture. However, despite increasing rates of application of synthetic nitrogen to cereals, wheat grain protein levels, in developed nations, have been frequently failing to reach the premium grade required by the bread-making market. Here, for the first time, we report that biological nitrogen fixation from a new generation of hardseeded annual forage legumes, when grown in rotation with cereal crops, can replace fertiliser N without compromising grain protein. The forage legumes were grown in rotation with Triticum aestivum, and compared with rotations that included a fallow, or a cereal crop at three rainfed sites in Western Australia with differing soil types for 2–4 years. The wheat received low, medium and high rates of urea to indicate if forage legumes can provide sufficient nitrogen for sustainable wheat production. At all sites and years studied, we discovered that cereal grains produced following a year of forage legumes had significantly higher protein levels than when grown as part of a continuous cereal rotation. These results were achieved in combination with a reduction in on-farm emissions (by over 200 kg/ha of CO2) without compromising yield as indicated by emissions accounting. Including appropriate forage legumes in farming systems allows production of low emission intensity grain proteins in dryland farming.
Journal article
Published 2023
Soil & tillage research, 231, 105734
The sandplain soils of WA are inherently fragile with surface layers that are very low in organic matter and clay content. The advent of minimum- and no-till farming has seen the increase in frequency and intensity of cropping on these soils. However, a combination of soil physio-chemical constraints and agronomic issues remain a challenge to the sustainability of cropping systems on them. These constraints include sub-soil compaction, soil water repellence, sub soil acidity and herbicide resistant weeds. Strategic deep tillage such, as soil inversion and deep soil mixing, have been shown to ameliorate these multiple constraints and dramatically increase crop production. For WA soils, an increase in herbicide usage is correlated with a decrease in regular tillage, and how the two interact is imperfectly understood. As a result, current herbicide strategies and rates are designed to perform optimally in a minimum tillage environment. Two field experiments were established to compare crop damage from a range of commonly used pre-emergent herbicides when grown in soil that remained under minimum tillage, was deep mixed or inverted. These trials demonstrated that both strategic tillage methods significantly changed the soil surface composition that would be expected to directly affect the bioavailability of some herbicides. Two commonly used herbicides, Metribuzin and Diuron, detrimentally impacted crop performance following tillage in both trials. These same treatments reduced yield by a greater extent on both the soil inversion and deep mixing treatments (p < 0.001). No other herbicides, when applied at either label or triple label rates, significantly impacted yield on any of the soil treatments. There was a substantial crop production benefit from strategic deep tillage at Esperance but not at Geraldton. These results reflect that the influence of deep tillage on the toxicity of herbicides is highly dependent upon soil properties and rainfall.
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Journal article
Responses to controlled release potassium fertilisers in agriculture following phosphate mining
Published 2021
Soil Research, 59, 7, 727 - 736
The transition from mining to agriculture is hampered by a range of abiotic challenges to crop growth, including nutritional issues and heavy metal stress. Building on our previous work showing that potassium (K) limits legume growth in post-phosphate mining substrates on tropical Christmas Island, Australia, we undertook two field trials. The first compared the efficacy of controlled release K fertilisers (CRFs: KCl 2-month release, K2SO4 3-month and K2SO4 9-month) with immediately available potassium sulfate (K2SO4) fertiliser, on the legume Lablab purpureus. The second trial tested responses of L. purpureus to different rates of K2SO4 9-month CRF, and a combination treatment (CRF and K2SO4). Both trials were undertaken to determine how CRFs compare with immediately available K2SO4 in terms of increasing biomass, reducing cadmium (Cd) concentrations, maximising plant K concentrations and maintaining K soil retention. The first trial revealed that K2SO4 3-month and 9-month CRFs were similar to the 160 kg/ha K2SO4 treatment in significantly increasing L. purpureus biomass. Plant Cd and other heavy metal concentrations were significantly lower as plant biomass increased with increasing K, including with CRFs. The second trial showed no difference between various rates of K2SO4 9-month CRF and immediately available 160 kg/ha K2SO4 to increase biomass, reduce Cd or increase K concentrations. We have shown that although post-phosphate mining substrates can limit legume growth, high biomass can be attained with some CRFs, or K2SO4 at 160 kg/ha. Optimising nutrient input in post-mining agriculture is critical for developing safe, sustainable crops.
Journal article
Published 2021
Grass and Forage Science, 76, 1, 44 - 56
Climate variability and current farming practices have led to declining soil fertility and pH, with a heavy reliance on fertilizers and herbicides. The addition of forage and grain legumes to farming systems not only improves soil health but also increases farm profitability through nitrogen (N) fertilizer cost offsets. However, the formation of effective symbioses between legumes and rhizobia can be unreliable and is considered at risk when combined with dry sowing practices such as those that have been designed to obviate effects of climate change. This research was initiated to improve the robustness of the legume/rhizobia symbiosis in low pH, infertile and dry soils. Production from two cultivars of field pea (Pisum sativum) and two species of vetch (Vicia spp.), and symbiotic outcomes when inoculated with a range of experimental rhizobial strains (Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae), was assessed in broad acre field trials which simulated farmer practice. New rhizobia strains increased nodulation, N fixation, produced more biomass and higher seed yield than comparator commercial strains. Strain WSM4643 also demonstrated superior survival when desiccated compared to current commercial strains in the laboratory and on seed when delivered as inoculant in peat carriers. WSM4643 is a suitable prospect for a commercial inoculant in Australia and other agricultural areas of the world where growing peas and vetch on soils generally considered problematic for this legume/rhizobia symbiosis. A particular advantage of WSM4643 may be that it potentiates sowing inoculated legumes into dry soil, which is a contemporary response by farmers to climate variation.
Journal article
Published 2021
Agronomy for Sustainable Development, 41, 4, Article 45
In this study, seeds of Lebeckia ambigua E. Mey., a South African perennial legume, displayed a high level of physical dormancy, commonly termed ‘hardseededness’. In Australian agricultural systems, this trait is exploited in annual legumes to ensure their regeneration after a cropping phase. While hardseededness in annual legumes has been studied extensively, there have been fewer studies of this feature in perennial legumes. Here, for the first time, we examine the conditions required for hard seed breakdown in L. ambigua, with experiments undertaken in both the field and laboratory. The annual legumes Ornithopus sativus Brot. and Biserrula pelecinus L. were included for comparison. More than 50% of the hard seed of L. ambigua, when buried at 0.5 cm for 87 weeks, remained hard, and 25% were still hard after 188 weeks. We are also the first to demonstrate genetic variation in hard seed breakdown patterns of L. ambigua when buried at 0.5 cm. In the laboratory, L. ambigua seed softened after exposure to a temperature of 80°C for 2–8 days in a dry oven and also after reaching 60°C in a cycling temperature oven, with fluctuating humidity. Seed of L. ambigua produced in two different geographic regions of Western Australia and then buried at 0.5 or 4 cm in the soil, at two softening locations, became differentially soft over 188 weeks. There was a significant three-way interaction between burial depth, site and maternal influences (P<0.01) on hard seed breakdown. The pattern of hard seed breakdown revealed in this perennial legume reflects that described for pyrogenic species and does not fit the models developed by agricultural researchers for annual legumes. Understanding the ecological triggers for release of seeds of L. ambigua from dormancy has provided opportunities for exploitation of this trait in future sustainable agricultural development.
Journal article
Published 2021
Grass and Forage Science, 76, 1, 33 - 43
Over the last three decades, farming systems in Europe and Australia have seen a decline in legume plantings, leading to reduced soil carbon and fertility, and an increase in plant disease, reliance on industrial nitrogen fertilizer and herbicides. In Australia, one reason for this decline has been the movement towards sowing crops and forages into dry soil, before the opening rains, as a consequence of climate variability. This practice predicates against the survival of rhizobial inoculants, and hence generates uncertainty about legume performance. The research reported here was initiated to improve the robustness of a specific forage legume/rhizobia symbiosis to increase nitrogen fixation in low pH, infertile soils. Rhizobial strains (Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae) from Pisum sativum L. were sourced from acid soils in southern Italy and southern Australia. Strains were evaluated for N fixation on the forage legumes P. sativum, Vicia sativa and Vicia villosa, then for survival and persistence in acid soils (pHCa 4.6). Fourteen of the strains produced a higher percentage of nitrogen derived from the atmosphere (%Ndfa) compared to commercial comparator strain SU303 (<78%). Twenty‐two strains survived sufficiently into the second season to form more nodules than SU303, which only achieved 3% of plants nodulated. Elite strains WSM4643 and WSM4645 produced six times more nodulated plants than SU303 and had significantly higher saprophytic competence in acid soil. These strains have the ability to optimize symbiotic associations with field peas and vetch in soils with low fertility, carbon and pH that are restrictive to the current commercial strain SU303.
Journal article
Association of phytophthora with declining vegetation in an urban forest environment
Published 2020
Microorganisms, 8, 7, Article 973
Urban forests consist of various environments from intensely managed spaces to conservation areas and are often reservoirs of a diverse range of invasive pathogens due to their introduction through the nursery trade. Pathogens are likely to persist because the urban forest contains a mixture of native and exotic plant species, and the environmental conditions are often less than ideal for the trees. To test the impact of different land management approaches on the Phytophthora community, 236 discrete soil and root samples were collected from declining trees in 91 parks and nature reserves in Joondalup, Western Australia (WA). Sampling targeted an extensive variety of declining native trees and shrubs, from families known to be susceptible to Phytophthora. A sub-sample was set aside and DNA extracted for metabarcoding using Phytophthora-specific primers; the remaining soil and root sample was baited for the isolation of Phytophthora. We considered the effect on the Phytophthora community of park class and area, soil family, and the change in canopy cover or health as determined through sequential measurements using remote sensing. Of the 236 samples, baiting techniques detected Phytophthora species from 24 samples (18 parks), while metabarcoding detected Phytophthora from 168 samples (64 parks). Overall, forty-four Phytophthora phylotypes were detected. Considering only sampling sites where Phytophthora was detected, species richness averaged 5.82 (range 1–21) for samples and 9.23 (range 2–24) for parks. Phytophthora multivora was the most frequently found species followed by P. arenaria, P. amnicola and P. cinnamomi. While park area and canopy cover had a significant effect on Phytophthora community the R2 values were very low, indicating they have had little effect in shaping the community. Phytophthora cinnamomi and P. multivora, the two most invasive species, often co-occurring (61% of samples); however, the communities with P. multivora were more common than those with P. cinnamomi, reflecting observations over the past decade of the increasing importance of P. multivora as a pathogen in the urban environment.
Journal article
Published 2019
Austral Ecology, 44, 8, 1438 - 1450
Worldwide, extreme climatic events such as drought and heatwaves are associated with forest mortality. However, the precise drivers of tree mortality at individual and stand levels vary considerably, with substantial gaps in knowledge across studies in biomes and continents. In 2010–2011, a drought‐associated heatwave occurred in south‐western Australia and drove sudden and rapid forest canopy collapse. Working in the Northern Jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata) Forest, we quantified the response of key overstory (E. marginata, Corymbia calophylla) and midstory (Banksia grandis, Allocasuarina fraseriana) tree species to the extreme climate event. Using transects spanning a gradient of drought impacts (minimal (50–100 m), transitional (100–150 m) and severe (30–60 m)), tree species mortality in relation to stand characteristics (stand basal area and stem density) and edaphic factors (soil depth) was determined. We show differential mortality between the two overstory species and the two midstory species corresponding to the drought‐associated heatwave. The dominant overstory species, E. marginata, had significantly higher mortality (~19%) than C. calophylla (~7%) in the severe zone. The midstory species, B. grandis, demonstrated substantially higher mortality (~59%) than A. fraseriana (~4%) in the transitional zone. Banksia grandis exhibited a substantial shift in structure in response to the drought‐associated heatwave in relation to tree size, basal area and soil depth. This study illustrates the role of climate extremes in driving ecosystem change and highlights the critical need to identify and quantify the resulting impact to help predict future forest die‐off events and to underpin forest management and conservation.