Abstract
An experiment in south-eastern Australia in 1971 examined the semi-dwarf wheat WW15 when grown with two rates of nitrogen fertilizer (nil, 112 kg N ha-1) and under four irrigation regimes. The irrigation regimes comprised natural rainfall only (293 mm), and 2, 3 or 7 flood irrigations, scheduled according to cumulative pan evaporation. Nitrogen fertilizer had little effect, but grain yield increased from 4.3 t ha-1 with no irrigation to 8.1 t ha-1 with 7 irrigations. Each increase in irrigation frequency produced a significant (P < 0.01) increase in grain yield. A greater individual grain weight contributed most to the yield difference between nil and 2 irrigations. More spikes m-2 contributed most to the yield increase with higher irrigation frequencies. Irrigations also increased plant height, dry matter, leaf area and the proportion of fertile shoots.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
24 articles.
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