Chickpea in wheat-based cropping systems of northern New South Wales - II. Influence on biomass, grain yield, and crown rot in the following wheat crop

被引:45
作者
Felton, WL
Marcellos, H
Alston, C
Martin, RJ
Backhouse, D
Burgess, LW
Herridge, DF
机构
[1] New S Wales Agr & Fisheries, Ctr Crop Improvement, Tamworth, NSW 2340, Australia
[2] Univ Sydney, Dept Crop Sci, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
来源
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH | 1998年 / 49卷 / 03期
关键词
chickpea rotation; nitrogen; wheat disease;
D O I
10.1071/A97067
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
Rotational effects of chickpea, an important Nz-fixing pulse legume of the northern grains region, on subsequent wheat require quantification of the contribution of the legume to soil N and the N status of the wheat, and of suppression of soil and stubble-borne pathogens, such as crown rot (Fusarium graminearum. Schwabe Group 1). Results from selected treatments of 10 experiments in northern New South Wales in which chickpea and wheat in one season were followed by wheat in following seasons indicated generally higher dry matter (DM) and grain yields of wheat after chickpea than after wheat. Responses to chickpea were -0.8 to 3.3 t/ha (shoot DM) and -3 to 39 kg N/ha (shoot N). Responses in wheat grain yields were -0.1 to 1.7 t/ha (mean 0.85 t/ha); grain N responses were -2 to 33 kg/ha (mean 19 kg/ha). Grain protein responses were small (0.6%) and variable. Although these productivity responses could be explained largely in terms of additional nitrate-N following chickpea, we measured reduced incidences of crown rot in wheat after chickpea (range 1-36%, mean of 12%), compared with wheat after wheat (range 5-52%, mean 30%). Modelling the incidence of crown rot indicated highly significant interactions between prior crop and total water (pre-plant soil water plus in-crop rainfall). When wheat followed chickpea, incidence of the disease declined sharply with increasing water. When wheat followed wheat, there was a marginal decline in disease incidence with increasing water. Our results support the strategy of using legumes in rotation with wheat in the northern grains region for enhanced soil-N supply and disease-break effects.
引用
收藏
页码:401 / 407
页数:7
相关论文
共 16 条
[11]   EFFECTS OF LUPIN-WHEAT ROTATIONS ON SOIL FERTILITY, CROP DISEASE AND CROP YIELDS [J].
REEVES, TG ;
ELLINGTON, A ;
BROOKE, HD .
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE, 1984, 24 (127) :595-600
[12]   NITROGEN AVAILABILITY IN A DARLING DOWNS SOIL FOLLOWING CEREAL, OILSEED AND GRAIN LEGUME CROPS .2. EFFECTS OF RESIDUAL SOIL-NITROGEN AND FERTILIZER NITROGEN ON SUBSEQUENT WHEAT CROPS [J].
STRONG, WM ;
HARBISON, J ;
NIELSEN, RGH ;
HALL, BD ;
BEST, EK .
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE, 1986, 26 (03) :353-359
[14]   NITROGEN AVAILABILITY IN A DARLING DOWNS SOIL FOLLOWING CEREAL, OILSEED AND GRAIN LEGUME CROPS .1. SOIL-NITROGEN ACCUMULATION [J].
STRONG, WM ;
HARBISON, J ;
NIELSEN, RGH ;
HALL, BD ;
BEST, EK .
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE, 1986, 26 (03) :347-351
[15]  
WILDERMUTH G B, 1971, Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry, V11, P455, DOI 10.1071/EA9710455
[16]  
WILDERMUTH GB, 1993, CROPPING STRATEGIES, P93