Author:
SINGH PIARA,MONTEITH J. L.,LEE K. K.,REGO T. J.,WANI S. P.
Abstract
During rainless weather following a monsoon, sorghum (Sorghum
bicolor cv. SPH–280) was grown
on a Vertisol either unirrigated throughout growth or irrigated for 7 weeks
after emergence and
rainfed thereafter. Before sowing, ammonium sulphate was applied at six
rates from 0 to
150 kg/ha N. Roots were sampled every 2 weeks to determine biomass
and root length density as a
function of depth. Every week, soil water content in all treatments was
measured gravimetrically to
a depth of 0·23 m and with a neutron probe from 0·3 to 1·5
m.Below 0·45 m, volumetric water content was a negative exponential
function of time after roots
arrived and the maximum depth of extraction moved downwards at 2–5
cm per day. In the dry
treatment, the extraction ‘front’ lagged behind the deepest
roots by c. 12 days initially but the two
fronts eventually converged. Irrigation delayed the descent of the extraction
front by c. 20 days but
thereafter it appeared to descend faster than without irrigation. Averaged
over N rates, the time
constant of the exponential function was inversely related to the root
length density,
lv, decreasing
with depth from about 20 to 10 days as lv increased
from
2·5 to 4·0 km/m3.The biomass[ratio ]water ratio was almost independent of N but increased
from a mean of 5·3 g dry
matter per kg water in the dry treatments to 6·9 g/kg with irrigation.
When normalized by the
seasonal mean difference in vapour pressure deficit within irrigated and
unirrigated plots, the ratios
were 13·1 and 13·3 kPa g per kg water, respectively.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
7 articles.
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