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Effect of sowing date and seed rate on crop development and grain production of winter wheat.

A. Darwinkel, +2 more
- 01 May 1977 - 
- Vol. 25, Iss: 2, pp 83-94
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TLDR
In a field trial in 1973-5, winter wheat cv. Lely was sown on three dates at 3- to 4-week intervals from end-Sept. to mid-May as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
In a field trial in 1973-5, winter wheat cv. Lely was sown on 3 dates at 3- to 4-wk intervals from end-Sept. at low (80-90 kg seed/ha) or high (160-180 kg seed/ha) sowing rates. Delaying the sowing date decreased grain yield. This decrease was caused by a smaller number of grains/ear and a lower grain wt. Sowing rate had a positive influence on the number of ears, but a negative effect on the number of grains/ear and the grain wt. With early sowing, sowing rate was found to have no effect on grain yield, due to mutual compensation of changes in yield components. With late sowing, a higher sowing rate increased the number of ears so much that a higher grain yield was achieved. The grain yield/ear depended on the age of the tiller. Tillers that emerged earlier produced more and heavier ears. The number of grains/ear and the grain wt. could be related to the rate of development of the ear-bearing shoot. The pattern of tillering was affected by the sowing date. With early sowing, most tillers emerged in autumn and winter, whereas the late-sown wheat tillered in spring. Also, the early-sown crop consisted largely of ears from early tillers, whereas the late-sown one had many ears from late-formed tillers. (Abstract retrieved from CAB Abstracts by CABI’s permission)

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Controlling plant form through husbandry to minimise lodging in wheat

TL;DR: It is suggested that new genotypes are needed to achieve lodging-proof wheat crops, particularly to provide stronger basal internodes and a wider root plate per shoot.
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Patterns of tillering and grain production of winter wheat at a wide range of plant densities.

TL;DR: The effect of plant density on the growth and productivity of the various earbearing stems of winter wheat was studied in detail to obtain information on the pattern of grain production of crops grown under field conditions as mentioned in this paper.
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Effect of sowing date on the optimum plant density of winter wheat.

TL;DR: The experiments demonstrated scope for reducing plant populations below the current target of 250-300 plants m -2 ; however, the degree of reduction was dependent on sowing date, and compensation for reduced population was due to increased shoot number per plant, increased grain number per ear and to a lesser extent increased grain size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth and Yield Response of Facultative Wheat to Winter Sowing, Freezing Sowing and Spring Sowing at Different Seeding Rates

TL;DR: Winter-sown wheat produced a significantly higher leaf area index, leaf area duration, spikes per square metre, kernel weight and grain yield than freezing- and spring-sow wheat, and seeding rate was not as important as sowing time in maximizing grain yield.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of harvest and sowing time on the performance of the rotation of winter wheat-summer maize in the North China Plain

TL;DR: Three-year field experiments were carried out to compare the grain yield, evapotranspiration (ET), water use efficiency (WUE) and economic return under six combinations of the harvest time of summer maize and sowing date of winter wheat from 2002 to 2005.
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