TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of soil residual boron on rice performance and soil properties under conventional and conservation rice-wheat cropping systems
AU - Nadeem, Faisal
AU - Farooq, Muhammad
AU - Mustafa, Basit
AU - Nawaz, Ahmad
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by USA Pakistan Center for Advanced Studies in Food and Agriculture (USPCAS-AFS), University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 CSIRO. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - Application of boron (B) to wheat in conservation rice-wheat cropping systems may have a residual effect that improves productivity and grain quality of the following rice crop. Two field experiments were conducted to evaluate the effect of soil residual B on the performance, grain quality and grain yield of rice and soil biological properties under puddled transplanted (PuTR) and direct-seeded (DSR) rice systems on silty loam soil. A preceding wheat crop was sown using two different tillage systems, plough tillage (PTW) and no tillage (NTW), in combination with four B application treatments: Control (no B), soil application (SA, 1 kg ha-1), seed priming (0.01 M), and foliar spray (0.01 M). After wheat harvest, rice was planted in PuTR and DSR systems. The conservation tillage system in both wheat and rice (NTW-DSR) significantly increased soil organic carbon (by 18%) and soil microbial biomass carbon (by 5%) over conventional tillage systems (PTW-PuTR). Improved soil health and availability of soil residual B in the NTW-SA-DSR system improved grain yield (by 23-37%) and grain quality (grain protein by 3-8%, amylose content by 26%) over PTW-PuTR irrespective of B application method. Best economic return and net benefit were recorded in the order NTW-SA-DSR & PTW-SA-DSR & NTW-SA-PuTR. Thus, the application of B to NTW had a strong residual effect on grain quality and profitability of the following rice crop. In rice-wheat cropping systems on a silty loam soil, conservation tillage systems (NTW-DSR) significantly improved the availability of soil residual B and soil health and increased economic return.
AB - Application of boron (B) to wheat in conservation rice-wheat cropping systems may have a residual effect that improves productivity and grain quality of the following rice crop. Two field experiments were conducted to evaluate the effect of soil residual B on the performance, grain quality and grain yield of rice and soil biological properties under puddled transplanted (PuTR) and direct-seeded (DSR) rice systems on silty loam soil. A preceding wheat crop was sown using two different tillage systems, plough tillage (PTW) and no tillage (NTW), in combination with four B application treatments: Control (no B), soil application (SA, 1 kg ha-1), seed priming (0.01 M), and foliar spray (0.01 M). After wheat harvest, rice was planted in PuTR and DSR systems. The conservation tillage system in both wheat and rice (NTW-DSR) significantly increased soil organic carbon (by 18%) and soil microbial biomass carbon (by 5%) over conventional tillage systems (PTW-PuTR). Improved soil health and availability of soil residual B in the NTW-SA-DSR system improved grain yield (by 23-37%) and grain quality (grain protein by 3-8%, amylose content by 26%) over PTW-PuTR irrespective of B application method. Best economic return and net benefit were recorded in the order NTW-SA-DSR & PTW-SA-DSR & NTW-SA-PuTR. Thus, the application of B to NTW had a strong residual effect on grain quality and profitability of the following rice crop. In rice-wheat cropping systems on a silty loam soil, conservation tillage systems (NTW-DSR) significantly improved the availability of soil residual B and soil health and increased economic return.
KW - conventional and conservation tillage
KW - grain quality
KW - residual B
KW - rice-wheat cropping systems
KW - soil properties
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85106609804&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85106609804&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1071/CP20339
DO - 10.1071/CP20339
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85106609804
SN - 1836-0947
VL - 72
SP - 335
EP - 347
JO - Crop and Pasture Science
JF - Crop and Pasture Science
IS - 5
ER -