Comparative efficacy of improved crop management technologies of wheat (Triticum aestivum) in Bihar


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Authors

  • A K SINGH Deputy Director General (Agricultural Extension) and Director, ATARI-Agricultural Technology Application Research Institute, Patna, Bihar 801 506, India
  • R K MALIK Senior Agronomist, CSISA, CYMMIT
  • ANJANI KUMAR Director, ICAR-ATARI, Patna.
  • R ROY BURMAN Principal Scientist (Agricultural Extension), ATARI-Agricultural Technology Application Research Institute, Patna, Bihar 801 506, India
  • PINAKI ROY SRF, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi 110 012

https://doi.org/10.56093/ijas.v89i8.92872

Keywords:

Crop management, Sowing schedule, Wheat productivity, Zero tillage

Abstract

Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is the world’s most widely cultivated cereal crop. It is commonly eaten in both time meals in major wheat growing states. Field experiments were conducted at eight KVKs of Bihar during year 2016- 2018 based on different agro ecological situations. In the field experiment it was found that early wheat sowing has emerged as the most important variable for increasing the grain yield (5 t/ha) than late sown. Data shows that instead of skipping irrigation at grain filling stage, one irrigation applied at grain filling stage increased the wheat grain yield by 13% when the sowing was done with zero tillage and 16% when sowing was done by conventional method. With irrigation, the average grain yield of wheat with zero tillage was 5.30 t/ha compared to 4.54 t/ha under conventional tillage. To trace the impact of different herbicide application technologies, it was found multiple boom nozzle sfitted with flat fan nozzles and tractor mounted sprayer provided similar wheat grain yield (5.1-5.3 t/ha) than hollow cone nozzles with grain yield of 4.6 t/ha. It was referred that grain yield of wheat were 4.51, 4.60 and 4.38 t/ha following the application of glyphosate at 24, 48 h or 7-10 days before seeding wheat, respectively. Total 304 replications have been conducted to study the effect of ZT on the productivity of wheat sown at different times and was found that ZT wheat (HD-2967) planted from 1-15 November gives highest yield than other sowing date.

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References

Kaur C. 2017. Performance of Wheat Varieties under Late and Very Late Sowing Conditions. International Journal of Current Microbiology and Applied Science (9): 3488–92. DOI: https://doi.org/10.20546/ijcmas.2017.609.428

DabreW M, Lall S B and Lngole G L. 1993. Effects of sowing dates on yield, ear number, stomatal frequency and stomatal index in wheat. Journal of Maharashtra Agricultural University (18): 64–6.

Waheddullah, Dhaka A K, Kumar S, Bhatia J K, Singh B and Ramprakash. 2018. Growth and yield performance of dual purpose wheat as influenced by sowing time and cutting schedule. International Journal of Chemical Studies 2018; 6(2): 2611–4.

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Submitted

2019-08-19

Published

2019-08-19

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

SINGH, A. K., MALIK, R. K., KUMAR, A., BURMAN, R. R., & ROY, P. (2019). Comparative efficacy of improved crop management technologies of wheat (Triticum aestivum) in Bihar. The Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences, 89(8), 1344–1348. https://doi.org/10.56093/ijas.v89i8.92872
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