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180445

Effect of Organic Amendments, Nitrogenous Fertilization and Spray of Micronutrients on Barley

Article

Last updated: 23 Jan 2023

Subjects

-

Tags

Crops and quality

Abstract

This investigation aimed to increase barley grain yield. In this respect, two field experiments were carried out at the Experimental Farm, Faculty of Agriculture (Saba Basha), Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt, in a split- split plot design with three replications during 2013/2014 and 2014/2015 growing seasons. Main plot treatments were sulphur rates (0, 200 and 400 kg/ha), however nitrogen fertilizer sources (urea, nitrate ammonium and ammonium sulphate) were allocated in sub-plots and biofertilizers inoculation (control, mycorrhizae and phosphorein inoculation) were distributed in sub- sub plots. The obtained results indicated that increasing sulphur application up to 400 kg/ha., significantly increased all studied yield, yield components and grain composition traits, i.e. number and weight of spikes/m2, number of spikelets and grains/spike, 1000-kernel weight, biological, straw and grain yield/ha, harvest index, grain protein, nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium content in the two studied seasons. Also, ammonium sulphate (as nitrogen source) produced the highest values of the previous trait. However, inoculated barley grains with phosphorein biofertilizers showed the highest of the studied traits except phosphorus grains content in the two seasons, where inoculation with mycorrhizae showed the highest grains phosphorus content (0.273 and 0.287%) in the two successive seasons. Sulphur application at 400 kg/ha., combined with ammonium sulphate or phosphorein inoculation interaction produced the highest values of all studied traits, except P and K contents in grains, meanwhile 400 kg S/ha application combined with mycorrhizal inoculation had the highest P and K content in two seasons. Ammonium sulphate X phosphorein inoculation interaction had the same trend in the two seasons. Regarding the three factors of interaction effects, sowing inoculated grains with phosphorein under 400 kg S/ha and ammonium sulphate application produced the highest values of the studied traits, except P and K grains content in both seasons. Conversely, any of two and three factors of interaction did not reach significant level effect on 1000- grains weight in the two seasons.

DOI

10.21608/jalexu.2016.180445

Keywords

Sulphur rate, nitrogen sources, biofertilizers, Barley, yield, Attributes, grain quality

Authors

First Name

Mahmoud

Last Name

Gomaa

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Plant Production Department, Faculty of Agriculture (Saba Basha), Alexandria University

Email

mohmoud.gomaa@gmail.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Fathy

Last Name

Radwan

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Plant Production Department, Faculty of Agriculture (Saba Basha), Alexandria University

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Ibrahim

Last Name

Fathallah Rehab

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Faculty of Agriculture saba basha, Alexandria University

Email

ifr1281@yahoo.com

City

Alexandria

Orcid

-

First Name

Essam

Last Name

Kandil

MiddleName

Esmael

Affiliation

Plant Production Department, Faculty of Agriculture (Saba Basha), Alexandria University

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Mansour

Last Name

AbdElRazek

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Plant Production Department, Faculty of Agriculture (Saba Basha), Alexandria University

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

21

Article Issue

4

Related Issue

26009

Issue Date

2016-12-01

Receive Date

2016-07-20

Publish Date

2016-12-01

Page Start

596

Page End

608

Print ISSN

1110-5585

Online ISSN

2785-9525

Link

https://jalexu.journals.ekb.eg/article_180445.html

Detail API

https://jalexu.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=180445

Order

6

Type

Research papers

Type Code

1,789

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Journal of the Advances in Agricultural Researches

Publication Link

https://jalexu.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

-

Details

Type

Article

Created At

23 Jan 2023