Abstract

A field experiment was conducted at Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru College of Agriculture and Research Institute, Karaikal during October 2020 - January 2021 to investigate the effects of brown manuring on yield, yield attributes, nutrient availability, nutrient uptake and soil micro-flora in wet seeded rice. The experiment was carried out with ten treatments (T1 - rice with dhaincha 15 kg ha-1 + 2,4-D 0.5 kg ha-1, T2-rice with dhaincha 20 kg ha-1 + 2,4-D 0.5 kg ha-1, T3 - rice with dhaincha 25 kg ha-1 + 2,4 - D 0.5 kg ha-1, T4 - rice with dhaincha 15 kg ha-1 + bispyribac sodium 25 g ha-1, T5-rice with dhaincha 20 kg ha-1 + bispyribac sodium 25 g ha-1, T6-rice with dhaincha 25 kg ha-1 + bispyribac sodium 25 g ha-1,T7 - rice alone + 2,4 - D 0.5 kg ha-1, T8 - rice alone + bispyribac sodium 25 g ha-1, T9 - rice alone with hand weeding twice at 20 and 40 DAS, T10- unweeded control) replicated thrice in a randomized block design. The result from the study showed that the yield (4.82 t ha-1) and yield attributes of rice were significantly enhanced when co-cultured with dhaincha 25 kg ha-1 + 2,4-D or bispyribac sodium 25 g ha-1application was comparable with other brown manured treatments but superior than rice alone. Co-culturing with dhaincha 25 kg ha-1 with rice resulted in higher nutrient availability (208.9, 32.8, 231.6 kg N, P, K per hectare respectively), nutrient uptake (65.6, 16.4, 69.7 kg N, P, K per hectare respectively) by rice and soil microbial population at harvest (brown manuring either with 2,4-D or bispyribac sodium). Therefore, co-culture of brown manure involving a post-emergence herbicide was more competitive against weeds and the dead residue proved to be simulative to wet sown rice crop for boosting growth and yield.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call