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Water use Efficiency, Growth and yield of Wheat cultivated under competition with Setaria.

Research Authors
Ihsan M. Z., EL-Nakhlawy F.S., and Ismail S. M. 2015
Research Abstract

Understanding the critical period of weed competition is indispensable in the
development of an effective weed management program in field crops. Current experiment
was planned to evaluate the critical growth period of Setaria and level of yield losses associated
with delay in weeding in rain-fed drip irrigated wheat production system of Saudi Arabia.
Field experiment was conducted to evaluate the effect of weeding interval (07-21, 14-28,
21-35, 28-42 and 35-49 days after sowing) and drought stress (75% and 50% of field capacity)
on Setaria growth, wheat yield and water use efficiency. Season long weedy check and wellwatered
(100% FC) plots were also maintained for comparison. Weeding interval and drought
stress significantly (p ≤ 0.05) affected the growth and yield of Setaria and wheat. Drought
stress from 75% to 50% FC resulted in reductions of 29-40% in Setaria height, 14-27% in
Setaria density and 11-26% in Setaria dry biomass. All weeding intervals except 35-49 DAS
significantly suppressed Setaria growth as compared with control. Delay in weeding increased
weed-crop competition interval and reduced wheat yield and yield contributors. Therefore,
the lowest yield of 1836 kg ha-1 was attained for weeding interval of 35-49 DAS at 50% FC.
Water use efficiency and harvest index increased with decreasing FC levels but reduced with
delay in weeding. Correlation analysis predicted negative association of Setaria density with
wheat yield and yield contributors and the highest negative association was for harvest
index (-0.913) and water use efficiency (-0.614). Early management of Setaria is imperative for
successful wheat production otherwise yield losses are beyond economical limits.

Research Department
Research Journal
Planta Daninha, Viçosa-MG,
Research Publisher
NULL
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
Vol. 33, n. 4,
Research Website
NULL
Research Year
2015
Research Pages
pp. 679-687.