Bioherbicidal Activity and Metabolic Profiling of Potent Allelopathic Plant Fractions Against Major Weeds of Wheat—Way Forward to Lower the Risk of Synthetic Herbicides

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dc.contributor.author Sobia Anwar, Saadia Naseem
dc.contributor.author Saira Karimi, Muhammad Rafique Asi
dc.contributor.author Ahmed Akrem, Zahid Ali
dc.date.accessioned 2024-11-06T08:18:07Z
dc.date.available 2024-11-06T08:18:07Z
dc.date.issued 2021-09-10
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/18352
dc.description.abstract The productivity of major field crops is highly compromised due to weed infestation. Inefficient weed management practices and undue and excessive use of chemical herbicides have drastically contaminated the environment and human health, in addition to resistance development in weed species. Therefore, utilization of allelopathic plants to explore phytochemicals as potent organic alternatives to such chemical herbicides has become indispensable. The current study evaluates the comparative bio-herbicidal potential of methanolic extracts of castor (Ricinus communis), artemisia Qrtemisia santolinifolia), wheat (Triticum aestivum), and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) to suppress growth of major weeds, i.e., wild mustard (Sinapic arvensis), Italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum), and carrot grass (Parthenlum hysterophorus). The results demonstrated a concentration-dependent effect on weeds' growth. Overall, in vitro seed germination was reduced from 60 to 100% in response to 5% (w/v) extract concentration. Significant reduction in radicle length, hypocotyl length, and fresh biomass of the weeds was also observed.A strong inhibitory effect was seen in in vivo pot experiments, revealing that application of 10—20% methanolic extracts induced permanent wilting and substantial reduction in the chlorophyll content of weeds along with 20—80% increase in oxidative stress. Artemisia showed themost significant allelopathic effect, on account of highest phenolic and flavonoid contents, followed by castor, wheat, and sorghum, against S. arvensis, L. multiflorum, and P. hysterophorus, respectively. Phytochemical analysis, through high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), also exhibiteda correlation between extract's phytotoxicity and their antioxidant potential due to their major constituents (rutin, quercetin, catechin, gallic acid, vanillic acid, syringic acid, ferulic acid, p-hydroxy benzoic acid, p-coumaric acid, and sinapic acid), among thetotal of 13 identified in methanolic fractions. Comprehensive profiling of allelochemicals with liquid chromatography—mass spectrometry (LC-MS) determined 120, 113, 90, and 50 derivates of phenolic acids, flavonoids, and alkaloids, reported for the first time through this study, demonstrating significant allelopathic potential of the targeted plant fractions, which can be explored further to developa sustainable bio-herbicidal formulation. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Frontiers in Plant Science en_US
dc.subject plant extracts, allelopathy, bio-herbicide, phenolic, compounds, weed management en_US
dc.title Bioherbicidal Activity and Metabolic Profiling of Potent Allelopathic Plant Fractions Against Major Weeds of Wheat—Way Forward to Lower the Risk of Synthetic Herbicides en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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