Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest Ethiopia

A field experiment was conducted for 2 years during the main cropping seasons of 2017 and 2018 in Fogera Plain to study the productivity response of lowland rice varieties to different sources of nitrogen fertilizer. The experiment was conducted using a factorial arrangement of three sources of N fe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amare Aleminew, Getachew Alemayehu, Enyew Adgo, Tilahun Tadesse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Cogent Food & Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2019.1707020
id doaj-251aad0cd0934f7eb3f921b9b1e79416
record_format Article
spelling doaj-251aad0cd0934f7eb3f921b9b1e794162021-03-02T16:11:06ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Food & Agriculture2331-19322019-01-015110.1080/23311932.2019.17070201707020Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest EthiopiaAmare Aleminew0Getachew Alemayehu1Enyew Adgo2Tilahun Tadesse3Bahir Dar UniversityBahir Dar UniversityBahir Dar UniversityFogera National Rice Research and Training CenterA field experiment was conducted for 2 years during the main cropping seasons of 2017 and 2018 in Fogera Plain to study the productivity response of lowland rice varieties to different sources of nitrogen fertilizer. The experiment was conducted using a factorial arrangement of three sources of N fertilizer (conventional urea, slow-release urea and urea supergranule) and three varieties of rain-fed lowland rice (Hiber, Ediget and X-jigna) laid out in a randomized complete block design (RCBD) with three replications. The recommended rate of 69 kg N ha–1 was used for all three sources of nitrogen fertilizer. Results showed that highest soil-plant analysis development value, leaf area index (LAI), thousand-grain weight, biomass and grain yields of rice were recorded with the interaction of urea supergranule N fertilizer application and Hiber rice variety, while the lowest values of the parameters were recorded with the interaction of conventional urea application and X-jigna rice variety. Rain-fed lowland rice grain yield of 4.6 ton ha–1 was obtained from the interaction of urea supergranule and Hiber rice variety. Economic evaluation results showed also that the highest net return of 58,947.50 Ethiopian Birr ha–1 was estimated from the combination of urea supergranule and Hiber rice variety. According to the present results, the interactions of urea supergranule N fertilizer with Hiber and Ediget rice varieties were found as the first and the second outsmarted combinations that would be used further for exploiting more grain yield and net benefits of rain-fed lowland rice without yield penalty in Fogera Plain, northwest Ethiopia.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2019.1707020lowland rice varietynet benefitn sourcesspad valueurea supergranule
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amare Aleminew
Getachew Alemayehu
Enyew Adgo
Tilahun Tadesse
spellingShingle Amare Aleminew
Getachew Alemayehu
Enyew Adgo
Tilahun Tadesse
Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest Ethiopia
Cogent Food & Agriculture
lowland rice variety
net benefit
n sources
spad value
urea supergranule
author_facet Amare Aleminew
Getachew Alemayehu
Enyew Adgo
Tilahun Tadesse
author_sort Amare Aleminew
title Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest Ethiopia
title_short Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest Ethiopia
title_full Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest Ethiopia
title_fullStr Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of N fertilizer in Fogera Plain, Northwest Ethiopia
title_sort response of rain-fed lowland rice varieties to different sources of n fertilizer in fogera plain, northwest ethiopia
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Food & Agriculture
issn 2331-1932
publishDate 2019-01-01
description A field experiment was conducted for 2 years during the main cropping seasons of 2017 and 2018 in Fogera Plain to study the productivity response of lowland rice varieties to different sources of nitrogen fertilizer. The experiment was conducted using a factorial arrangement of three sources of N fertilizer (conventional urea, slow-release urea and urea supergranule) and three varieties of rain-fed lowland rice (Hiber, Ediget and X-jigna) laid out in a randomized complete block design (RCBD) with three replications. The recommended rate of 69 kg N ha–1 was used for all three sources of nitrogen fertilizer. Results showed that highest soil-plant analysis development value, leaf area index (LAI), thousand-grain weight, biomass and grain yields of rice were recorded with the interaction of urea supergranule N fertilizer application and Hiber rice variety, while the lowest values of the parameters were recorded with the interaction of conventional urea application and X-jigna rice variety. Rain-fed lowland rice grain yield of 4.6 ton ha–1 was obtained from the interaction of urea supergranule and Hiber rice variety. Economic evaluation results showed also that the highest net return of 58,947.50 Ethiopian Birr ha–1 was estimated from the combination of urea supergranule and Hiber rice variety. According to the present results, the interactions of urea supergranule N fertilizer with Hiber and Ediget rice varieties were found as the first and the second outsmarted combinations that would be used further for exploiting more grain yield and net benefits of rain-fed lowland rice without yield penalty in Fogera Plain, northwest Ethiopia.
topic lowland rice variety
net benefit
n sources
spad value
urea supergranule
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2019.1707020
work_keys_str_mv AT amarealeminew responseofrainfedlowlandricevarietiestodifferentsourcesofnfertilizerinfogeraplainnorthwestethiopia
AT getachewalemayehu responseofrainfedlowlandricevarietiestodifferentsourcesofnfertilizerinfogeraplainnorthwestethiopia
AT enyewadgo responseofrainfedlowlandricevarietiestodifferentsourcesofnfertilizerinfogeraplainnorthwestethiopia
AT tilahuntadesse responseofrainfedlowlandricevarietiestodifferentsourcesofnfertilizerinfogeraplainnorthwestethiopia
_version_ 1724234404953325568