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Sowing

About: Sowing is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 33888 publications have been published within this topic receiving 273438 citations. The topic is also known as: seeding.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Warm-season cover crops have potential to serve as a C source for ASD in vegetable and other crop production systems, but more work is needed to improve consistency and further elucidate mechanisms of control of soilborne plant pathogens and weeds during ASD treatment utilizing cover crops.
Abstract: Anaerobic soil disinfestation (ASD) has been shown to be an effective strategy for controlling soilborne plant pathogens and plant-parasitic nematodes in vegetable and other specialty crop production systems. Anaerobic soil disinfestation is based upon supplying labile carbon (C) to stimulate microbially-driven anaerobic soil conditions in moist soils covered with polyethylene mulch. To test the effectiveness of warm-season cover crops as C sources for ASD, a greenhouse study was conducted using a sandy field soil in which several warm-season legumes and grasses were grown and incorporated and compared to molasses-amended and no C source controls. Greenhouse pots were irrigated to fill soil porosity and covered with a transparent polyethylene mulch to initiate a 3-week ASD treatment prior to planting tomatoes. Soilborne plant pathogen inoculum packets, yellow nutsedge (Cyperus esculentus L.) tubers, and Southern root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne incognita (Kofoid & White) Chitwood; M.i.) eggs and juveniles were introduced at cover crop incorporation. In nearly all cases, ASD treatment utilizing cover crops as a C source resulted in soil anaerobicity values that were equal to the molasses-amended fallow control and greater than the no C source fallow control. In trial 1, Fusarium oxysporum Schlechtend.:Fr. (F.o.) survival was reduced by more than 97% in all C source treatments compared to the no C source control but there was no effect of C source in Trial 2. Carbon source treatments were inconsistent in their effects on survival of Sclerotium rolfsii Sacc. (S.r). In general, the number of M.i. extracted from tomato root tissue and root gall ratings were low in all treatments with cover crop C source, molasses C source, or composted poultry litter. Germination of yellow nutsedge tubers was highest in the no C source control (76%), lowest in the molasses control (31%), and intermediate from cover crop treatments (49% to 61%). Warm-season cover crops have potential to serve as a C source for ASD in vegetable and other crop production systems, but more work is needed to improve consistency and further elucidate mechanisms of control of soilborne plant pathogens and weeds during ASD treatment utilizing cover crops.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Canopy stay green proved to be a more reliable attribute for use in breeding for adaptation to late plantings than some other genotype characteristics linked to yield.
Abstract: Sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) yields are strongly reduced when normal sowing dates are delayed. The objectives of this study were to investigate the physiological bases of the sowing date (S), genotype (G), and G x S interaction effects on sunflower yield, and to contribute to the formulation of ideotype-based selection strategies for improving yield at late plantings. Nine hybrids differentially adapted to northern and central Argentina were evaluated during two seasons in October (normal) and December (late) planting dates at Venado Tuerto, Argentina. Yield was defined as the product of total biomass and harvest index. Sowing date accounted for most of the yield variation. The G × S interaction, in turn, accounted for a portion of the total variability three times higher than the contribution of G. Both S and G x S interaction effects on yield mostly involved the variation of attributes and processes expressed postanthesis. Biomass differences between planting dates were the dominant determinant of the S effect on yield. The genotype-specific responses for harvest index were the dominant determinant of the G x S interaction, and were mostly associated with changes in the rate of harvest index increase. Variations in biomass and harvest index were strongly associated with the amount of intercepted radiation during grain filling which, in turn, was associated to duration of grain filling and green leaf area. Canopy stay green proved to be associated with adaptation to late planting dates. This indirect selection criterion appears to be a more reliable attribute for use in breeding for adaptation to late plantings than some other genotype characteristics linked to yield.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is significant national potential for dual-purpose use of winter wheat cultivars across Australia’s HRZ, with opportunities identified in all regions and prospects to graze shorter season spring cultivars that fit later sowing windows require further examination.
Abstract: Interest is growing in the potential to expand cropping into Australia’s high-rainfall zone (HRZ). Dual-purpose crops are suited to the longer growing seasons in these environments to provide both early grazing for livestock and later regrow to produce grain. Grain yield and grazing potential of wheats of four different maturity types were simulated over 50 years at 13 locations across Australia’s HRZ, and sowing date, nitrogen (N) availability and crop density effects were explored. Potential grazing days on wheat were obtained by simulating sheep grazing crops to Zadoks growth stage Z30 at 25 dry sheep equivalents (DSE)/ha. Optimal sowing dates for each maturity type at each location were matched to the flowering window during which risk of frost and heat stress was lowest. Overall, we found significant national potential for dual-purpose use of winter wheat cultivars across Australia’s HRZ, with opportunities identified in all regions. Simulated mean wheat yields exceeded 6 t/ha at most locations, with highest mean grain yields (8–10 t/ha) in southern Victoria, and lower yields (5–7 t/ha) in the south-west of Western Australia (WA) and central and northern New South Wales (NSW). Highest grazing days were from winter cultivars sown early (March–mid-April), which could provide 1700–3000 DSE-days/ha of grazing across HRZ locations; this was 2–3 times higher than could be obtained from grazing spring cultivars (200–800 DSE-days/ha). Sowing date was critical to maximise both grazing and grain yield potential from winter cultivars; each 1-week delay in sowing after 8 March reduced grazing by 200–250 DSE-days/ha and grain yield by 0.45 t/ha. However, in Mediterranean climates, a lower frequency of early sowing opportunities before mid-April (<30% of years) is likely to limit the potential to use winter cultivars. Prospects to graze shorter season spring cultivars that fit later sowing windows require further examination in south-west WA, the slopes of NSW and southern Queensland.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Better use efficiency of B can be achieved if it is applied late for wheat but in splits over a longer period for mustard and potato with higher economic benefits.
Abstract: Boron-deficiency is prevalent in light-textured acidic soil regions receiving high precipitation. Crop use efficiency of fertiliser B is also low under such B-leaching environments. For high leaching regimes, we hypothesised that the optimal timing and method of B application would vary with the crop sensitivity to B-deficiency and periods of peak demand for B. The aim of the present experiment was to vary the timing and method of B application to increase use efficiency on typical B-deficient Entisols. Mustard (Brassica campestris L.), wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) were the test crops. There were seven treatment combinations of B, applied either to soil or as foliar sprays at different doses and growth stages of the crops. Biomass and yield related characters of the crops at harvest, B concentration in plants and its uptake increased with B application being highest in mustard, followed by potato and wheat. Foliar application, in general had higher economic benefits than soil application. Split application of B either to soil (as basal and 25 days after sowing) or foliar sprays (at 25 and 40 and 25 and 45 days after sowing for mustard and potato, respectively) had an edge over a single application. For wheat, a single late application of B (at 45 or 60 days after sowing through soil or foliar spray, respectively) was more effective than the early or split application in increasing yields. Better use efficiency of B can thus be achieved if it is applied late for wheat but in splits over a longer period for mustard and potato with higher economic benefits.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a model was developed for a frequent and harmful weed, i.e., Alopecurus myosuroides Huds, to simulate the effects of cropping systems on black-grass emergence, in interaction with seed characteristics, tillage and soil climate.

95 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
20232,551
20225,773
2021919
20201,657
20192,181