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Yield and economics of wheat as influenced by preceding crops, tillage practices and moisture regimes.

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Title Yield and economics of wheat as influenced by preceding crops, tillage practices and moisture regimes.
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Creator Suresh Kumar ; Dhindwal, A. S. ; Parveen Kumar ; Meena Sehwag
 
Subject cost benefit analysis, crop yield, economic analysis, irrigation, mung beans, no-tillage, returns, seed weight, spikes, sweet sorghum, tillage, wheat, yield components
 
Description Organism descriptor(s) : Sorghum bicolor, Triticum, Triticum aestivum, Vigna radiata

Descriptor(s) : cost benefit analysis, crop yield, economic analysis, irrigation, mung beans, no-tillage, returns, seed weight, spikes, sweet sorghum, tillage, wheat, yield components

Identifier(s) : green gram, no-tillage systems, soil cultivation, sugar sorghum, watering, zero tillage

Geographical Location(s) : Haryana, India

Broader term(s) : Sorghum, Poaceae, Poales, commelinids, monocotyledons, angiosperms, Spermatophyta, plants, eukaryotes, Triticum, Vigna, Papilionoideae, Fabaceae, Fabales, eudicots, India, Commonwealth of Nations, Developing Countries, South Asia, Asia
Yield and economics of zero-till wheat succeeding mungbean and sorghum were evaluated under three moisture regimes viz., irrigation at CRI+IW/CPE of 0.5, 0.7 and 0.9 during 2003-04 and 2004-05 at Research Farm of CCS Haryana Agricultural University, Hisar, Haryana (India). Earhead numbers, 1000-grain weight, grain and straw yield, net returns and B:C ratio were higher when mungbean was preceding crop than the sorghum. The yield attributes and yield did not differ significantly with tillage practices in 2003-04. In the second crop season, spikes/m2 and grain weight were higher in zero-till wheat compared to conventional tillage, resulting in significantly higher grain and straw yields. The net returns and B:C ratio were higher under zero tillage during both the crop seasons. Higher moisture regime with irrigation at CRI+IW/CPE=0.9 resulted in more spikes/m2 and grains/spike during 2003-04 and grain weight during the second crop season resulted in increased yield than at CRI+IW/CPE=0.5. Increase in each level of moisture regime from irrigation at CRI+IW/CPE=0.5 to 0.9 resulted in enhanced net returns as well as the B:C ratio in both the crop seasons.
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Date 2020-02-26T05:31:09Z
2020-02-26T05:31:09Z
2014-12
 
Type Article
 
Identifier Kumar, Suresh; Dhindwal, A.S., Kumar, Parveen and Sewhag, Meena. 2014. Yield and economics of wheat as influenced by preceding crops, tillage practices and moisture regimes. Annals of Biology. 30(4): 641-644.
ISSN : 0970-0153
http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/33320
 
Language English
 
Relation Not Available;
 
Publisher Agri Bio Research Publishers