Irrigation and nitrogen scheduling as a requirement for optimising wheat yield and quality in Haryana, India

被引:28
|
作者
Coventry, D. R. [1 ]
Yadav, A. [2 ]
Poswal, R. S. [3 ]
Sharma, R. K. [3 ]
Gupta, R. K. [3 ]
Chhokar, R. S. [3 ]
Gill, S. C. [3 ]
Kumar, V. [4 ]
Kumar, A. [3 ]
Mehta, A. [5 ]
Kleemann, S. G. L. [1 ]
Cummins, J. A. [6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Adelaide, Sch Agr Food & Wine, Waite Campus, SA, Australia
[2] CSS Haryana Agr Univ, Hisar, Haryana, India
[3] Directorate Wheat Res, Karnal 132001, Haryana, India
[4] CSS Haryana Agr Univ, KVK, Bawal, Haryana, India
[5] CSS Haryana Agr Univ, KVK, Sirsa, Haryana, India
[6] Rural Solut SA, Kingscote, SA, Australia
关键词
N fertiliser; Split applications; Apparent recovery; Attainable yields; Chapatti quality; FED MEDITERRANEAN CONDITIONS; USE EFFICIENCY; NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT; CROPPING SYSTEM; WINTER-WHEAT; SPRING WHEAT; FERTILIZATION; PROTEIN; WATER;
D O I
10.1016/j.fcr.2011.05.004
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
Wheat in Haryana (NW India) is grown as a winter crop in an annual sequence with rice. cotton, pearl millet or cluster bean as the main monsoon crops. Higher wheat yields in Haryana are associated with the use of modern varieties, increase in fertiliser use, improved irrigation practice and conservation tillage, and the recommendation to farmers for N fertiliser rates and timing and irrigation practice have an emphasis on optimising yield and input efficiencies. In India the importance to consumers of product quality does exist and, although the market place presently does not actively reward farmers for better quality wheat, the need for creating suitable and targeted marketing opportunities is now recognised. This paper examines aspects of input efficiencies and focuses on combinations of N-fertiliser and irrigation input in wheat crops grown with these four rotations (rice-wheat, cotton-wheat, pearl millet-wheat and cluster bean-wheat). Management practices that optimise grain production as well targeting grain that achieves best chapatti (Indian flat bread) quality are evaluated within a split-plot experiment where 4 irrigation schedule treatments were split with nitrogen management treatments involving a 2-way or 3-way split of N fertiliser. With the rice-wheat system, there were no differences between different split timings of N with grain yield, however with the 3 other wheat systems the 3 way split of N-fertiliser application, with N applied equally at N-fertiliser applied at seeding, early tillering and first node stage, always gave the highest yield. With all 4 rotations the highest protein level was achieved (range 11.8-12.5%) with this 3-way N application split. Grain yield increased in a step-wise manner as additional irrigation was implemented with all rotations and the highest protein outcomes were achieved with the least irrigations. The apparent recovery of N fertiliser applied was similar and highest with the 3-way split, and the 2-way split that did not include a basal N fertiliser application. Different rates of N fertiliser were included in separate experiments using the 3-way split of N application, and with the rice-wheat rotation the GreenSeeker instrument was used to establish the rate for the third application of N. The application of extra N-fertiliser with the non rice-wheat rotations produced no additional grain yield with an increase in the N-fertiliser input beyond 150 kg N ha(-1), although protein and N-content increased incrementally. Grain hardness and chapatti score trended higher with increases in N-fertiliser input but the increases were relatively small. The use of the GreenSeeker instrument with the rice-wheat rotation resulted in N saving of 21-25 kg N ha(-1) with similar grain yield, protein and grain hardness to that provided by using the recommended 150 kg N ha(-1). Where the GreenSeeker was used the apparent recovery was 70-75% compared with 60% with the wheat receiving the recommended 150 kg N ha(-1), suggesting farmers are likely to be over-fertilising their wheat crop. The best yields obtained in these experiments were about 5.5-6.0 t ha(-1) and these yields are consistent with a decade-long attainable yield identified for wheat in rice-wheat rotation for Haryana. If farmers can achieve market recognition for chapatti quality, and with the use of appropriate varieties, then farmers can assume that the best practice outlined here for optimising grain yield with integrated nutrient and soil management will be the same practice that optimises chaatti quality. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:80 / 88
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] A Review on Regulation of Irrigation Management on Wheat Physiology, Grain Yield, and Quality
    Si, Zhuanyun
    Qin, Anzhen
    Liang, Yueping
    Duan, Aiwang
    Gao, Yang
    PLANTS-BASEL, 2023, 12 (04):
  • [32] Effects of Irrigation and Polymer-Coated Urea on Water-Nitrogen Productivity and Yield of Winter Wheat
    Fan, Zhen
    Zhao, Youxin
    Chen, Haining
    Chen, Yurong
    Bu, Derui
    Xu, Jiyao
    Guo, Xinran
    Wang, Yue
    Tian, Xiaofei
    JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE AND PLANT NUTRITION, 2022, 22 (04) : 4717 - 4726
  • [33] Nitrogen requirement to achieve maximum yield and quality in processing potato varieties
    Marcela Giletto, Claudia
    Rattin, Jorge
    Eduardo Echeverria, Hernan
    Osmar Caldiz, Daniel
    REVISTA DE LA FACULTAD DE CIENCIAS AGRARIAS, 2011, 43 (01) : 85 - 95
  • [34] Effects of irrigation and nitrogen fertilizer management on wheat grain baking quality based on the SiriusQuality2 crop model
    Liu, Jianchao
    IRRIGATION AND DRAINAGE, 2023, 72 (03) : 729 - 746
  • [35] Improving wheat yield, quality and resource utilization efficiency through nitrogen management based on micro-sprinkler irrigation
    Yao, Chunsheng
    Li, Jinpeng
    Zhang, Zhen
    Liu, Ying
    Wang, Zhimin
    Sun, Zhencai
    Zhang, Yinghua
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2023, 282
  • [36] Risk assessment of possible impacts of climate change and irrigation on wheat yield and quality with a modified CERES-Wheat model
    Liu, Jianchao
    JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE, 2021, 12 (06) : 2444 - 2459
  • [37] Effects of water and nitrogen coupling on photosynthetic characteristics and yield of winter wheat in film hole irrigation fields
    Fu, Yuliang
    Cui, Zhenhua
    Yao, Jiaqi
    Ji, Fangyao
    Lu, Wanyuan
    He, Zhenjia
    Gao, Zhikai
    Wang, Songlin
    DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT, 2022, 268 : 273 - 284
  • [38] Effects of Reducing Nitrogen Application Rate under Different Irrigation Methods on Grain Yield, Water and Nitrogen Utilization in Winter Wheat
    Li, Jinpeng
    Wang, Zhimin
    Song, Youhong
    Li, Jincai
    Zhang, Yinghua
    AGRONOMY-BASEL, 2022, 12 (08):
  • [39] The Coupled Effects of Irrigation Scheduling and Nitrogen Fertilization Mode on Growth, Yield and Water Use Efficiency in Drip-Irrigated Winter Wheat
    Zain, Muhammad
    Si, Zhuanyun
    Li, Sen
    Gao, Yang
    Mehmood, Faisal
    Rahman, Shafeeq-Ur
    Mounkaila Hamani, Abdoul Kader
    Duan, Aiwang
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (05) : 1 - 18
  • [40] IMPROVE OF GRAIN YIELD AND QUALITY OF WINTER WHEAT BY NITROGEN INPUTS
    Madjar, Roxana Maria
    Vasile Scaeteanu, Gina
    Anton, Andreea
    SCIENTIFIC PAPERS-SERIES A-AGRONOMY, 2018, 61 (01): : 310 - 315