Abstract

Kenaf, also known as Deccan hemp (Hibiscus cannabinus L.) is the one of the most important, hardy and economic bast fiber industrial crops. Sulfur plays a significant role in determining yield and quality of fiber crops. However, the effect of sulfur application on yield, nutrient uptake in kenaf varieties, agronomic efficiency, apparent S recovery, and nutrient availability and sulfur fractions is still unclear. Thus, the present investigation was carried out to study the effect of sulfur (S) fertilization (S0= Control, S15=15kg S ha−1, S30=30kg S ha−1, S45=45kg S ha−1) on fiber yield, nutrient uptake, nutrient availability and S fractions of experimental soil and to screen the kenaf varieties (‘JBM-2004-D’, ‘MT-150’, ‘AMC-108’ and ‘HC-583’) for higher S use efficiency and increased productivity. Compared to control (S0), S45 treatment significantly increased fiber yield of kenaf by 37%. MT-150 produced the highest fiber yield (2.61 t ha−1). Among the S levels, S45 exhibited lowest value of agronomic efficiency (16.5 kg kg−1 S), apparent S recovery (18.7%) and highest value of nutrient uptake in kenaf. Results also revealed that nutrient availability (nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium) increased with increase in S levels at all soil depths and the nutrient status decreased with depth. Sulfur fractions (total S, organic S, adsorbed S, plant available S) increased with increasing S levels and followed the order as organic S > non-sulfate S > adsorbed S > plant available S. In addition, organic sulfur contributed 63–74% of total sulfur. Thus, the results suggest that by selecting appropriate variety and level of sulfur (@ 30 kg ha−1) for kenaf cultivation farmers can obtain higher fiber yield for sustainable crop production.

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