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Optimising supplemental irrigation for wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and the impact of plant bio-regulators in a semi-arid region of Deccan Plateau in India

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Title Optimising supplemental irrigation for wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and the impact of plant bio-regulators in a semi-arid region of Deccan Plateau in India
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Creator G C Wakchaure
P S Minhas
P Ratnakumar
R L Choudhary
 
Subject Supplemental irrigationPlant bio-regulatorsLine source sprinkler (LSS)Water productivityWater deficits
 
Description Not Available
Understanding the effects of water stress on yield formation is essential for planning irrigation and other mitigation strategies in arid and semiarid regions. Therefore, a field experiment was conducted for 3 years to evaluate the impact of irrigation regimes and plant bio-regulators (PBR’s) on grain yield and water productivity of spring wheat (Triticum aeastivum L). PBR’s applied through exogenous sprays included: 10 mM thiourea (TU), 10 μM salicylic acid (SA), 15 g L−1 potassium nitrate (KNO3), 25 ppm gibberellic acid (GA3), 8 ppm ortho-silicic acid (OSA) at crown root initiation (CRI), flag leaf and seed milking stages and control (no PBR). Seven irrigation levels were generated through a line source sprinkler system (LSS) viz., application of irrigation water (IW) equalling 1.0, 0.85, 0.70, 0.55, 0.40, 0.25 and 0.10 times the CPE (cumulative open pan evaporation). The maximum yield obtained with PBR’s varied between 4.11–4.46 Mg ha−1 at IW:CPE 0.85 against 4.09 Mg ha−1 without PBR. While the yield decline equalled 0.35–0.42 Mg ha−1 for every 0.1 IW:CPE for PBR’s against 0.43 Mg ha−1 without PBR. The overall improvement in grain yield and total biomass with PBR’s ranged between 5.9–20.6% and 4.8–15.3%, respectively. Specifically TU and SA showed a major role under medium (IW:CPE 0.40–0.69) and severe (0.10–0.39) stress conditions in terms of maintenance of leaf water content, modulating the stomatal opening and better water usage and thereby improved yield by 0.41–0.88 Mg ha−1. The maximum water productivity ranged between 1.20–1.35 kg m−3 with different PBR’s while it was 1.18 kg m−3 without PBR and the latter could be achieved with 19–56% lesser irrigation water with PBR’s. Overall conclusions are that the effects of deficit irrigation could be substantially enhanced in terms of grain yield and water productivity when used conjunctively with PBR’s like TU and SA. Thus for integrating PBR’s with supplemental irrigation, large scale testing is required for defining their economic spray schedules under water scarcity conditions.
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Date 2019-10-05T04:58:56Z
2019-10-05T04:58:56Z
2016-04-01
 
Type Research Paper
 
Identifier 8
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http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/23189
 
Language English
 
Relation Not Available;
 
Publisher Elsevier