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1.
Field Crops Res ; 197: 83-96, 2016 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27698532

RESUMO

Machinery for sowing wheat directly into rice residues has become more common in the rice-wheat systems of the north-west Indo-Gangetic Plains of South Asia, with increasing numbers of farmers now potentially able to access the benefits of residue retention. However, surface residue retention affects soil water and temperature dynamics, thus the optimum sowing date and irrigation management for a mulched crop may vary from those of a traditional non-mulched crop. Furthermore, the effects of sowing date and irrigation management are likely to vary with soil type and seasonal conditions. Therefore, a simulation study was conducted using the APSIM model and 40 years of weather data to evaluate the effects of mulch, sowing date and irrigation management and their interactions on wheat grain yield, irrigation requirement (I) and water productivity with respect to irrigation (WPI) and evapotranspiration (WPET). The results suggest that the optimum wheat sowing date in central Punjab depends on both soil type and the presence or absence of mulch. On the sandy loam, with irrigation scheduled at 50% soil water deficit (SWD), the optimum sowing date was late October to early November for maximising yield, WPI and WPET. On the clay loam, the optimum date was about one week later. The effect of mulch on yield varied with seasonal conditions and sowing date. With irrigation at 50% SWD, mulching of wheat sown at the optimum time increased average yield by up to 0.5 t ha-1. The beneficial effect of mulch on yield increased to averages of 1.2-1.3 t ha-1 as sowing was advanced to 15 October. With irrigation at 50% SWD and 7 November sowing, mulch reduced the number of irrigations by one in almost 50% of years, a reduction of about 50 mm on the sandy loam and 60 mm on the clay loam. The reduction in irrigation amount was mainly due to reduced soil evaporation. Mulch reduced irrigation requirement by more as sowing was delayed, more so on the sandy loam than the clay loam soil. There was little effect of mulch on irrigation requirement for late October sowings. There were large trade-offs between irrigation input, yield, WPET and WPI on the sandy loam with regard to the optimum irrigation schedule. Maximum yield occurred with very frequent irrigation (10-20% SWD) which also had the greatest irrigation input, while WPI was highest with least frequent irrigation (70% SWD), and WPET was highest with irrigation at 40-50% SWD. This was the case with and without mulch. On the clay loam, the trade-offs were not so pronounced, as maximum yield was reached with irrigation at 50% SWD, with and without mulch. However, both WPET and WPI were maximum and irrigation input least at the lowest irrigation frequency (70% SWD). On both soils, maximum yield, WPET and WPI were higher with mulch, while irrigation input was slightly lower, but mulch had very little effect on the irrigation thresholds at which each parameter was maximised.

2.
J Agric Food Chem ; 47(6): 2459-67, 1999 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10794651

RESUMO

The behavior of glyphosate, extracted from four soils using aqueous triethylamine, was investigated at two temperatures. For each soil, and at both temperatures, there was a marked loss in the amount of extractable glyphosate immediately after addition of the herbicide to soil. This rapid loss of glyphosate was ascribed to adsorption of the herbicide into a nonextractable form. For three of the four soils used when incubated at 25 degrees C, the rates of loss of extractable glyphosate were similar to previously measured rates of degradation of this herbicide in these soils. However, loss of extractable glyphosate from the Culgoa clay loam was due not only to substrate degradation but also to slow sorption of glyphosate into the nonextractable form in this soil over the experimental period. For the Rutherglen and Walpeup soils, when incubated at 10 degrees C, the rates of loss of extractable glyphosate were half of the previously measured rate of degradation of this herbicide in these soils. However, there was no measured loss of extractable glyphosate from the Wimmera clay. As previous work has shown glyphosate to decompose readily in these soils at this temperature, these findings suggest that desorption of glyphosate may occur at a rate greater than degradation at this temperature and, hence, that temperature may play a pivotal role in sorption processes. Investigations with these soils when sterilized by gamma-irradiation showed that for the Walpeup, Wimmera, and Rutherglen soils, sorption was complete soon after the addition of the herbicide; however, for the Culgoa soil, further adsorption occurred over the entire experimental period.


Assuntos
Glicina/análogos & derivados , Herbicidas/química , Solo/análise , Etilaminas , Glicina/química , Glicina/isolamento & purificação , Herbicidas/isolamento & purificação , Termodinâmica , Glifosato
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