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Effects of deficit irrigation and transplanting methods of irrigated rice on soil physical properties and rice yield
Author(s) -
El Baroudy A. A.,
Ibrahim M. M.,
Mahmoud M. A.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
soil use and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.709
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1475-2743
pISSN - 0266-0032
DOI - 10.1111/sum.12084
Subject(s) - transplanting , irrigation , puddling , sowing , agronomy , environmental science , deficit irrigation , mathematics , irrigation management , biology
This study evaluated how deficit irrigation and method of transplanting irrigated rice affected soil physical properties in the short term and rice yields under cultivation that did not involve wet levelling (puddling). Field experiments were conducted in 2009 and 2010 at Sakha Agric. Res. Sta., Egypt. Planting methods were as follows: traditional transplanting into flat flooded soil (M 1 ), transplanting into furrows (M 2 ) and into beds (M 3 ). The deficit irrigation treatments were as follows: irrigation every 6 days between transplanting and 2 weeks before harvesting, reference method (I 1 ), irrigation as in I 1 but with a continuous period of 12 days without irrigation (i.e. one irrigation event missed) at heading (I 2 ), irrigation as in I 1 but with an event missed at the beginning of tillering and at the start of head development (I 3 ) and irrigation as in I 1 but with 3 missed events, one each at the beginning of tillering, the start of the head development and panicle initiation (I 4 ). Results showed that relative to soil conditions before planting, both rice transplanting methods and deficit irrigation decreased soil bulk density, water holding pores percentage, fine capillary pores percentage and soil shear strength, whereas drainable porosity percentage increased. Soil cracked more under the reference treatment than under the other treatments. Rice transplanting into beds and maintaining irrigation every 6 days without any irrigation skip, treatment (I 1  × M 3 ), appeared appropriate for growing rice. This combination resulted in soil physical properties favourable for plant growth, producing the largest grain and straw yields of all the treatments.

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