Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh

Farmers in Bangladesh are always seeking an optimal seed rate to reduce production costs and increase wheat yield. The Wheat Research Centre (WRC) of Bangladesh has developed new wheat varieties over several years. To reduce production costs and obtain higher grain yield (GY) from these varieties,...

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Main Authors: Mst Masuma Akhter, Akbar Hossain, Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva, Jagadish Timsina, Md Shohidul Islam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Prince of Songkla University 2019-04-01
Series:Songklanakarin Journal of Science and Technology (SJST)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rdo.psu.ac.th/sjstweb/journal/41-2/19.pdf
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spelling doaj-0d7a6c9d96d7451090bccecc825ca8c92020-11-24T21:26:28ZengPrince of Songkla UniversitySongklanakarin Journal of Science and Technology (SJST)0125-33952019-04-0141238939610.14456/sjst-psu.2019.49Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of BangladeshMst Masuma Akhter0Akbar Hossain1Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva2Jagadish Timsina3Md Shohidul Islam4Bangladesh wheat and Maize Research Institute (BWMRI), Dinajpur, 5200 Bangladesh Bangladesh wheat and Maize Research Institute (BWMRI), Dinajpur, 5200 Bangladesh P.O. Box 7, Miki-cho post office, Ikenobe 3011-2, Kagawa-ken, 761-0799 JapanFaculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3010 AustraliaHajee Mohammad Danesh Science and Technology University, Dinajpur, 5200 BangladeshFarmers in Bangladesh are always seeking an optimal seed rate to reduce production costs and increase wheat yield. The Wheat Research Centre (WRC) of Bangladesh has developed new wheat varieties over several years. To reduce production costs and obtain higher grain yield (GY) from these varieties, optimum seeding rates are needed. In this context, a two-year field experiment was conducted with five newly released wheat varieties (‘BARI Gom 24’, ‘BARI Gom 25’, ‘BARI Gom 26’, ‘BARI Gom 27’ and ‘BARI Gom 28’) and three seeding rates (100, 120 and 140 kg ha─1). These treatments were performed under irrigation in the WRC research field in Northern Bangladesh to determine the optimum seeding rates for these varieties. Significantly higher GY (p≤0.05) was obtained with a seeding rate of 140 kg ha─1 for all varieties, compared to other rates. A seeding rate less than the recommended rate (120 kg ha─1) for all varieties failed to produce comparable GY in both years. Among all varieties, ‘BARI Gom 26’ had the highest GY while ‘BARI Gom 25’ had the lowest GY in both years. Although the interaction effect of variety and seeding rate on GY did not vary significantly (p≤0.05) in both years, surplus GY was 467 and 233 kg ha─1, respectively for ‘BARI Gom 24’, 63 and 75 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 25’, 81 and 93 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 26’, 23 and 66 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 27’, and 152 and 220 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 28’ in the first and second year when seeded at 140 kg ha─1. For the same seed rate, the GY of ‘BARI Gom 24’ increased by 5.3 to 9.6% and that of ‘BARI Gom 28’ increased from 2.8 to 5% over the two years. Therefore, a seeding rate of 140 kg seed ha─1 is recommended for ‘BARI Gom 24’ and ‘BARI Gom 28’, while the current recommended rate (120 kg ha─1) should be continued for the other three varieties when grown under irrigation on the Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh.https://rdo.psu.ac.th/sjstweb/journal/41-2/19.pdfseeding ratewheatplant populationtillersyield
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mst Masuma Akhter
Akbar Hossain
Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
Jagadish Timsina
Md Shohidul Islam
spellingShingle Mst Masuma Akhter
Akbar Hossain
Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
Jagadish Timsina
Md Shohidul Islam
Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh
Songklanakarin Journal of Science and Technology (SJST)
seeding rate
wheat
plant population
tillers
yield
author_facet Mst Masuma Akhter
Akbar Hossain
Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
Jagadish Timsina
Md Shohidul Islam
author_sort Mst Masuma Akhter
title Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh
title_short Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh
title_full Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh
title_fullStr Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh
title_sort growth and yield of five irrigated spring wheat varieties as influenced by seeding rate in old himalayan piedmont plain of bangladesh
publisher Prince of Songkla University
series Songklanakarin Journal of Science and Technology (SJST)
issn 0125-3395
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Farmers in Bangladesh are always seeking an optimal seed rate to reduce production costs and increase wheat yield. The Wheat Research Centre (WRC) of Bangladesh has developed new wheat varieties over several years. To reduce production costs and obtain higher grain yield (GY) from these varieties, optimum seeding rates are needed. In this context, a two-year field experiment was conducted with five newly released wheat varieties (‘BARI Gom 24’, ‘BARI Gom 25’, ‘BARI Gom 26’, ‘BARI Gom 27’ and ‘BARI Gom 28’) and three seeding rates (100, 120 and 140 kg ha─1). These treatments were performed under irrigation in the WRC research field in Northern Bangladesh to determine the optimum seeding rates for these varieties. Significantly higher GY (p≤0.05) was obtained with a seeding rate of 140 kg ha─1 for all varieties, compared to other rates. A seeding rate less than the recommended rate (120 kg ha─1) for all varieties failed to produce comparable GY in both years. Among all varieties, ‘BARI Gom 26’ had the highest GY while ‘BARI Gom 25’ had the lowest GY in both years. Although the interaction effect of variety and seeding rate on GY did not vary significantly (p≤0.05) in both years, surplus GY was 467 and 233 kg ha─1, respectively for ‘BARI Gom 24’, 63 and 75 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 25’, 81 and 93 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 26’, 23 and 66 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 27’, and 152 and 220 kg ha─1 for ‘BARI Gom 28’ in the first and second year when seeded at 140 kg ha─1. For the same seed rate, the GY of ‘BARI Gom 24’ increased by 5.3 to 9.6% and that of ‘BARI Gom 28’ increased from 2.8 to 5% over the two years. Therefore, a seeding rate of 140 kg seed ha─1 is recommended for ‘BARI Gom 24’ and ‘BARI Gom 28’, while the current recommended rate (120 kg ha─1) should be continued for the other three varieties when grown under irrigation on the Old Himalayan Piedmont Plain of Bangladesh.
topic seeding rate
wheat
plant population
tillers
yield
url https://rdo.psu.ac.th/sjstweb/journal/41-2/19.pdf
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AT akbarhossain growthandyieldoffiveirrigatedspringwheatvarietiesasinfluencedbyseedingrateinoldhimalayanpiedmontplainofbangladesh
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