Abstract:
Allelopathy is the release of secondary compounds by a plant that affects the growth
of surrounding plants in a stimulatory and inhibitory manner. An "invasive species" is
a species that is foreign or non-native to the ecosystem under study and whose
introduction hurts or is anticipated to harm the economy, the environment, or human
health.
The current study's objective is to use various extracts to observe the allelopathic effects
in plants of Ageratum houstonianum and Ageratum conyzoides. Ageratum
houstonianum and Ageratum conyzoides plants were procured from the Dharan
neighborhood and dried in a lab at room temperature for a month. The extract was then
created using cold percolation on distilled water. All extracts' seed germination rates
were identified.
In a laboratory experiment, the allelopathic effects of plant extract from Ageratum
houstonianum and Ageratum conyzoides on the germination and seedling growth of
Triticum aestivum were examined at concentrations of 2.5%, 5%, 7.5%, and 10%. The
findings showed that the effects of water extract at different concentrations
considerably affected all aspects of wheat seedling germination and growth when
compared to controls. The effect of water extract of mixed (Ageratum houstonianum
and Ageratum conyzoides) at 10% concentration was discovered to have the lowest
germination percentage, germination index, root and shoot length, and seedling size in
wheat. With increasing aqueous solution concentration, the shoot, roots, and shoot
germination length were all decreased. The study found that increasing the quantity of
Ageratum houstonianum and Ageratum conyzoides plant extracts hurt Triticum
aestivum germination, shoot length, root length, and biomass output compared to the
control.
Description:
A PROJECT WORK SUBMITTED TO THE
DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY
CENTRAL CAMPUS OF TECHNOLOGY
INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY TRIBHUVAN
UNVERSITY
DHARAN, SUNSARI
NEPAL
FOR THE AWARD OF
BACHELOR OF SCIENCE (B.Sc.) IN BOTANY