scholarly journals Response of Native White Sorghum to Irrigation under Different Nitrogen-Fertility Levels and Seeding Rates in Lajas Valley, Puerto Rico

1969 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 92-112
Author(s):  
R. Vázquez ◽  
A. Eschenwald-Hess ◽  
M. J. Martínez-Luciano

A field experiment was conducted at Lajas Substation in order to study the effects of four irrigation and three nitrogen levels under three different seeding rates on dry-matter yields of White Native sorghum. The following irrigation treatments were tried: High moisture, plots irrigated when the average soil-moisture suction in the active root-zone reached 0.7 atm.; medium moisture, irrigated when the average soil-moisture suction reached 2.0 atm.; low moisture, irrigated when the average soil-moisture suction reached 5.0 atm., and nonirrigated plots were used as check. The nitrogen levels tested were 40, 80, and 120 pounds per acre per harvest. The seeding rates used were 10, 20, and 30 pounds per acre.

1969 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 389-412
Author(s):  
Roberto Vázquez

A field experiment was conducted at Lajas Substation in order to study the effects of three irrigation and three nitrogen levels on dry-matter yields of Para grass, Guinea grass, and the mixtures of these grasses with tropical kudzu. Some plots were frequently irrigated when the average soil-moisture suction in the active root-zone reached 0.7 atm. and intermediately irrigated when the average soil-moisture suction in the active root-zone reached 2.0 atm. Nonirrigated plots were used as a check. The nitrogen levels tested were 0, 400, and 800 pounds of nitrogen per acre per year.


Author(s):  
Gerardo Mangual Crespo ◽  
Robert Kluson ◽  
Eduardo C. Schröder

The combined effect of N fertilization and Rhizobium inoculation on bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L., cv. Bonita) nodulation and yield was studied in the semi-arid southern region of Puerto Rico. Six N treatments: 0, 22, 45, 90, 180 and 360 kg/ha were tested in inoculated and noninoculated plots arranged in a split-plot design with 4 replications. The application of 22 kg/ha of N in the inoculated plots increased plant nodulation 4 and 8 weeks after planting. Higher rates of N fertilization reduced the number and size of bean nodules at both sampling dates. On the other hand, dry beans consistently increased with applications of 0 to 180 kg/ha of N in the presence of Rhizobium.


1994 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-120
Author(s):  
N. A. Fairey ◽  
L. P. Lefkovitch

Nitrogen (N) fertilizer is usually applied to grass-legume herbage stands at a rate representing a compromise between the low N tolerance of the N-fixing process of legumes and the high N requirement of grasses. The productivity and N responsiveness of a bromegrass-alfalfa association was compared for stands in which the components were arranged at random (conventional grass-legume mixture, GLM) with those in adjacent, 1.5-m-wide strips of grass and legume (strip-culture, SC). One experiment compared three stand arrangements (GLM, and SC stands with grass:legume land areas of 1:1 and 2:1) receiving two rates of supplemental N (0 and 60 kg ha−1 N). A second experiment compared GLM to the 1:1 SC stand at five rates of supplemental N (0, 40, 80, 120, and 160 kg ha−1 N restricted to grass-containing areas of each stand treatment) under both natural and supplemental soil-moisture conditions. Physically separating the grass and legume plants in the SC stands reduced total herbage dry matter (DM) yield, particularly when little or no N was applied. In the SC stands, the reduction in DM yield caused by physically separating the grass and legume plants of the herbage mixture was compensated for by an increase in the apparent efficiency of N fertilizer use by the grass plants in that association. Herbage DM yield was enhanced greatly by supplemental water but the effects of N fertilization and/or stand arrangement were not modified by soil-moisture conditions. Strip-culture stands facilitate independent optimization of inputs for components of grass-legume associations. Key words: Grass-legume mixtures, nitrogen response, stand arrangement, herbage production, irrigation, bromegrass-alfalfa


1969 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Campbell ◽  
W. S. Ferguson

In growth chamber experiments, it was found that total and rate of moisture use by wheat were directly proportional to light intensity, except under conditions which restricted growth.Increasing the day temperature from 21° to 27 °C reduced the total moisture use. This was attributed to the greater vegetative dry matter produced at 21 °C. Under high soil moisture stress, (0.2 to 15 atm), plants used less water at a slower rate than at the lower stress (0.2 to 1.4 atm), but the moisture treatment had little effect on moisture use per gram of dry matter Apparently, under the conditions of this experiment the most important cause of reduced transpiration at high moisture stress was reduced plant growth.At about the late tillering to stem-extension stage, wheat was surprisingly insensitive to changes in moisture stress. An increase in soil moisture stress during this period did not result in the usual reduced rate of moisture consumption.Irrespective of the growth stage at which the stress was changed (increased or decreased), stress had little influence on moisture use per unit of straw dry matter. If the soil was "wet" (0.2 to 1.4 atm) at about the stem-extension stage, poor seed set occurred and thus moisture use per gram of seed was increased. When plants were provided with adequate aeration, moisture use per gram of seed was one-third that of plants grown under poor aeration.


Author(s):  
B. Soujanya ◽  
B. Balaji Naik ◽  
M. Uma Devi ◽  
T. L. Neelima ◽  
Anima Biswal

A field experiment was conducted at Agro Climate Research Center, Agricultural Research Institute, P.J.T.S Agricultural University, Rajendranagar, Hyderabad, India during rabi 2019-20. The field experiment was laid out in a split plot design with three replications. The treatments comprising of three irrigation scheduling based on (Depletion of Available Soil Moisture) at 60% DASM, 40% DASM and 20% DASM as main plots and three nitrogen levels viz., 90, 180 and 240 kg N ha-1 as sub-plots. The experiment was laid out in split plot design. The results indicated that, among the different treatment combinations, the crop irrigation scheduled at 20 % DASM in conjunction with 240 kg N ha-1 accumulated significantly more dry matter of 34.2 g, 149.2 g, 233.7 g and 284.8 g plant-1, at 6th leaf, silking, dough and physiological maturity stages, respectively. The nitrogen uptake was found to be more when the crop was irrigated at 20 % DASM in conjunction with 240 kg N ha-1 (67.1 g, 231.8 g, 294.7 g and 305.3 g plant-1) at 6th leaf, silking, dough and physiological maturity stages, respectively.


1969 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 121-137
Author(s):  
Roberto Vázquez

Three field experiments using three irrigation, three nitrogen, and three plant-population levels were conducted at Lajas Substation in order to determine the effect of irrigation in combination with nitrogen fertilizer and different plant populations on the production of field corn. "Frequently irrigated" plots were irrigated when 20 percent of the available moisture had been depleted from the active root zone, "intermediately irrigated" plots when the depletion was 60 percent, and "nonirrigated" plots were used as a check. The nitrogen levels tested were 0, 80, and 160 pounds per acre, and the plant-population levels were 9,600, 14,500, and 19,400 plants per acre.


2012 ◽  
Vol 170-173 ◽  
pp. 1334-1338 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohd Fakhrurrazi Ishak ◽  
N. Ali ◽  
A. Kassim

Many slope areas in Malaysia whether it is man made or natural slope are particularly vulnerable to soil erosion and shallow failures due to the increasing of soil moisture and porewater pressure. This study will determined the active root zone of the tree near the toe of the slope which suctions have been generated within this section. Hence, the effect it only focusing on hydrological aspect with soil moisture pattern near vicinity of the tree. The mechanical aspect of tree root such as tensile strength and bonding between root and soil which can led to increasing soil strength are assumed negligible in this study. From preliminary result of field monitoring show significant increase of total suction at near vicinity of tree which can lead to stability analysis on slope. The comparison of FOS will be presented between at the toe of slope with and without the tree. Furthermore, for slope studies area the reresult indicates that tree induced suction can be related to cause the factor of safety against slope failure improve up to 33.07%.


1969 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 85-105
Author(s):  
Roberto Vázquez

Two field experiments using nine irrigation and three nitrogen levels were conducted at Lajas Substation in order to determine the effects of irrigation at different growth stages on the production of field corn. Some plots were frequently irrigated, irrigated when 20 percent of the available moisture had been depleted from the active root zone; and intermediately irrigated, irrigated when the depletion was 60 percent throughout the whole growing season. Other plots were frequently irrigated from planting to the tasseling, silking, and hard-dough stages, not being irrigated thereafter; while others still were not irrigated after the crop was established until the tasseling, silking, and hard-dough stages; these plots were frequently irrigated thereafter. Nonirrigated plots were used as checks.


Author(s):  
D. K. Fuhriman ◽  
R. M. Smith

1. Prevailing methods of irrigation in Puerto Rico can be reasonably efficient in the use of water (about 50% retained) if the systems are carefully laid out and if the irrigators are well trained and conscientious. With the standard, short-run, big-furrow, McLane methods the greatest losses are caused by applying too much water in one irrigation and by applying water at times when the soil has very little available storage capacity. At its best, the short furrow (McLane) method has a high labor requirement and is therefore rather expensive. Properly designed sprinkler irrigation has shown a consistently high efficiency of about 75%. Major changes in irrigation methods, other than by sprinkling, would require alteration of field lay-outs, land preparation, cultural operations, and labor practices. Further study is needed to determine whether some such alterations might be feasible, and compatible with high cane yields. There are too many interdependent factors to permit much change in irrigation methods without upsetting other features of the system of cane culture as a whole. Details of irrigation methods (9) and of their efficiency (8) have already been reported elsewhere. 2. Regardless of the irrigation methods used, the periods of greatest opportunity for saving water with sugar cane are the first few and the last few months of the crop season. The greatest danger of damage to the crop because of lack of water normally comes during the season of peak growth which also corresponds with the highest average temperatures. Consumptive use of water at this time averages about 0.18 inch per day compared to 0.10 or 0.12 during the first and the last part of the season. 3. Soil moisture guides appear to offer the most promising present basis for determining when to irrigate. By depending upon soil moisture rather than upon arbitrary schedules or field men's judgment it appears to be possible to increase cane yields, save water, and save labor, all at the same time. These indications are being given extensive field scale tests by Luce and Co. at Aguirre. Both mercury type, tensiometers (constructed by the BPISAE shop at Beltsville) and Boyoucos type nylon resistance blocks are giving satisfactory results. The blocks are preferred because of simplicity of operations. Normal salt variations in soil have not affected block readings. Inherent block errors and block failures have been satisfactorily overcome by using 4 or more replicates at carefully selected stations representing a unit irrigation area. Any blocks which deviate seriously from the average are removed and replaced. The resistance or tension readings which serve as the basis for irrigation have been established by our tank and field studies and by laboratory soil moisture tension curves. For soil like the Santa Isabel clay in the area from Juana Díaz to Aguirre it is not safe to let the soil moisture tension in the main root zone of cane go much beyond one atmosphere. With any Puerto Rican soil a safe tension for irrigation should probably correspond with a point which is at least 5% above the wilting point on a laboratory pF (moisture retention) curve. 4. Present field results indicate that high sugar cane yields per acre probably mean less water use per unit of crop produced. This is the basis for a field scale experiment by Luce and Co. comparing two, block-controlled soil moisture levels, each with two levels of fertilization. 5. Under Puerto Rican conditions, crop characteristics and soil moisture levels probably overshadow the influence of variations in the weather factor on evapotranspiration much more often than under climates of the temperate zone where the weather factor is highly variable. In any detailed considerations of climatic influences, the weather records from Aguirre, San Juan, and Mayagüez, indicate that differences in wind movement should be given major consideration along with hours of sunshine and seasonal temperatures.


1973 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 491-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. R. McKNIGHT ◽  
G. K. MACLEOD ◽  
J. G. BUCHANAN-SMITH ◽  
D. N. MOWAT

Shelled corn of approximately 25% moisture was artificially dried (DC), ensiled (HMEC), or preserved either with 1.25% of a 60:40 mixture of acetic and propionic acids (HMAP) or with 1.00% propionic acid (HMP), and was examined for chemical and physical differences. Diets consisting of 66% corn (dry matter basis) were fed in a 4 × 4 latin square arrangement of treatments to four rumen and abomasal fistulated yearling heifers. High-moisture (HM) corn diets were more (P < 0.05) digestible in dry matter (77.4 vs. 74.2%) and energy (75.4 vs. 72.4%) than was the DC diet. Acid-treated corn diets had higher (P < 0.05) starch digestibility (95.6 vs. 91.7%) than DC diets. HMP diet was superior (P < 0.05) in starch digestibility to HMEC and significantly (P < 0.05) higher in nitrogen digestibility than was DC. Rumen ammonia nitrogen levels were higher (P < 0.05) on HMEC than on HMAP diet. Significantly (P < 0.05) higher total quantities of propionic and butyric acids in rumen fluid were observed on HMP diet and the quantity of total rumen volatile fatty acids tended to be higher on HMP than on other diets. Results suggest that HM corn diets move through the reticulorumen more slowly and experience greater digestion in this area than does DC diet.


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