Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains

Farmers' participatory field trials were conducted at Madhuban, and Taraori, the two participatory experimental sites/locations of the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia (CSISA), a collaborative project of IRRI and CIMMYT in Karnal district of Haryana, India, during Kharif (wet season) 2010 and 2011. This research aimed to evaluate preemergence (PRE) and postemergence (POST) herbicides for providing feasible and economically viable weed management options to farmers for predominant scented rice varieties. Treatments with pendimethalin PRE fb bispyribac-sodium + azimsulfuron POST had lower weed biomass at 45 days after sowing (DAS). At Madhuban, highest grain yield of scented basmati rice (3.43 t ha−1) was recorded with the sequential application of pendimethalin PRE fb bispyribac-sodium + azimsulfuron POST. However, at Taraori, yields were similar with pendimethalin or oxadiargyl PRE fb bispyribac-sodium and/or azimsulfuron POST. Applying oxadiargyl by mixing with sand onto flooded field was less effective than spray applications in non-flooded field. The benefit-cost ratio of rice crop was higher with herbicide treatments at both sites as compared with the non-treated weed-free check except single PRE and POST applications and sequential application of oxadiargyl PRE fb oxadiargyl PRE. In a separate experiment conducted at Nagla and Taraori sites, scented rice cultivars' ('CSR 30′ and 'Pusa 1121′) tolerance to three rates of azimsulfuron (15, 25, and 35 g ai ha−1) was evaluated over two years (2010 and 2011). CSR 30 (superfine, scented) was more sensitive to higher rates (35 g ai ha−1) of azimsulfuron as compared to Pusa 1121 (fine, scented). Crop injuries were 8 and 28% in case of CSR 30; 5 and 15% in Pusa 1121 when applied with azimsulfuron 25 and 35 g ai ha−1, respectively. Azimsulfuron applied at 35 g ai ha−1 reduced yield in both cultivars but in CSR 30 yield reduction was twofold (11.5%) as that of Pusa 1121 (5.2%).

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Main Authors: Singh, V., Jat, M.L., Ganie, Z.A., Chauhan, B.S., Gupta, R.K.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, B:C Ratio, Crop Injury, Dry Direct-Seeded Rice, POST, PRE, Weed Management, COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS, CROP LOSSES, DIRECT SOWING, DRY FARMING, HERBICIDES, WEED CONTROL,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/16992
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-169922023-11-14T20:41:27Z Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains Singh, V. Jat, M.L. Ganie, Z.A. Chauhan, B.S. Gupta, R.K. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY B:C Ratio Crop Injury Dry Direct-Seeded Rice POST PRE Weed Management COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS CROP LOSSES DIRECT SOWING DRY FARMING HERBICIDES WEED CONTROL Farmers' participatory field trials were conducted at Madhuban, and Taraori, the two participatory experimental sites/locations of the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia (CSISA), a collaborative project of IRRI and CIMMYT in Karnal district of Haryana, India, during Kharif (wet season) 2010 and 2011. This research aimed to evaluate preemergence (PRE) and postemergence (POST) herbicides for providing feasible and economically viable weed management options to farmers for predominant scented rice varieties. Treatments with pendimethalin PRE fb bispyribac-sodium + azimsulfuron POST had lower weed biomass at 45 days after sowing (DAS). At Madhuban, highest grain yield of scented basmati rice (3.43 t ha−1) was recorded with the sequential application of pendimethalin PRE fb bispyribac-sodium + azimsulfuron POST. However, at Taraori, yields were similar with pendimethalin or oxadiargyl PRE fb bispyribac-sodium and/or azimsulfuron POST. Applying oxadiargyl by mixing with sand onto flooded field was less effective than spray applications in non-flooded field. The benefit-cost ratio of rice crop was higher with herbicide treatments at both sites as compared with the non-treated weed-free check except single PRE and POST applications and sequential application of oxadiargyl PRE fb oxadiargyl PRE. In a separate experiment conducted at Nagla and Taraori sites, scented rice cultivars' ('CSR 30′ and 'Pusa 1121′) tolerance to three rates of azimsulfuron (15, 25, and 35 g ai ha−1) was evaluated over two years (2010 and 2011). CSR 30 (superfine, scented) was more sensitive to higher rates (35 g ai ha−1) of azimsulfuron as compared to Pusa 1121 (fine, scented). Crop injuries were 8 and 28% in case of CSR 30; 5 and 15% in Pusa 1121 when applied with azimsulfuron 25 and 35 g ai ha−1, respectively. Azimsulfuron applied at 35 g ai ha−1 reduced yield in both cultivars but in CSR 30 yield reduction was twofold (11.5%) as that of Pusa 1121 (5.2%). 168-176 2016-06-30T16:41:47Z 2016-06-30T16:41:47Z 2016 Article http://hdl.handle.net/10883/16992 10.1016/j.cropro.2015.12.021 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF MADHUBAN TARAORI SOUTH ASIA United Kingdom Elsevier 81 Crop Protection
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
B:C Ratio
Crop Injury
Dry Direct-Seeded Rice
POST
PRE
Weed Management
COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS
CROP LOSSES
DIRECT SOWING
DRY FARMING
HERBICIDES
WEED CONTROL
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
B:C Ratio
Crop Injury
Dry Direct-Seeded Rice
POST
PRE
Weed Management
COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS
CROP LOSSES
DIRECT SOWING
DRY FARMING
HERBICIDES
WEED CONTROL
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
B:C Ratio
Crop Injury
Dry Direct-Seeded Rice
POST
PRE
Weed Management
COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS
CROP LOSSES
DIRECT SOWING
DRY FARMING
HERBICIDES
WEED CONTROL
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
B:C Ratio
Crop Injury
Dry Direct-Seeded Rice
POST
PRE
Weed Management
COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS
CROP LOSSES
DIRECT SOWING
DRY FARMING
HERBICIDES
WEED CONTROL
Singh, V.
Jat, M.L.
Ganie, Z.A.
Chauhan, B.S.
Gupta, R.K.
Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains
description Farmers' participatory field trials were conducted at Madhuban, and Taraori, the two participatory experimental sites/locations of the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia (CSISA), a collaborative project of IRRI and CIMMYT in Karnal district of Haryana, India, during Kharif (wet season) 2010 and 2011. This research aimed to evaluate preemergence (PRE) and postemergence (POST) herbicides for providing feasible and economically viable weed management options to farmers for predominant scented rice varieties. Treatments with pendimethalin PRE fb bispyribac-sodium + azimsulfuron POST had lower weed biomass at 45 days after sowing (DAS). At Madhuban, highest grain yield of scented basmati rice (3.43 t ha−1) was recorded with the sequential application of pendimethalin PRE fb bispyribac-sodium + azimsulfuron POST. However, at Taraori, yields were similar with pendimethalin or oxadiargyl PRE fb bispyribac-sodium and/or azimsulfuron POST. Applying oxadiargyl by mixing with sand onto flooded field was less effective than spray applications in non-flooded field. The benefit-cost ratio of rice crop was higher with herbicide treatments at both sites as compared with the non-treated weed-free check except single PRE and POST applications and sequential application of oxadiargyl PRE fb oxadiargyl PRE. In a separate experiment conducted at Nagla and Taraori sites, scented rice cultivars' ('CSR 30′ and 'Pusa 1121′) tolerance to three rates of azimsulfuron (15, 25, and 35 g ai ha−1) was evaluated over two years (2010 and 2011). CSR 30 (superfine, scented) was more sensitive to higher rates (35 g ai ha−1) of azimsulfuron as compared to Pusa 1121 (fine, scented). Crop injuries were 8 and 28% in case of CSR 30; 5 and 15% in Pusa 1121 when applied with azimsulfuron 25 and 35 g ai ha−1, respectively. Azimsulfuron applied at 35 g ai ha−1 reduced yield in both cultivars but in CSR 30 yield reduction was twofold (11.5%) as that of Pusa 1121 (5.2%).
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
B:C Ratio
Crop Injury
Dry Direct-Seeded Rice
POST
PRE
Weed Management
COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS
CROP LOSSES
DIRECT SOWING
DRY FARMING
HERBICIDES
WEED CONTROL
author Singh, V.
Jat, M.L.
Ganie, Z.A.
Chauhan, B.S.
Gupta, R.K.
author_facet Singh, V.
Jat, M.L.
Ganie, Z.A.
Chauhan, B.S.
Gupta, R.K.
author_sort Singh, V.
title Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains
title_short Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains
title_full Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains
title_fullStr Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains
title_full_unstemmed Herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western Indo- Gangetic Plains
title_sort herbicide options for effective weed management in dry direct-seeded rice under scented rice-wheat rotation of western indo- gangetic plains
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/16992
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AT jatml herbicideoptionsforeffectiveweedmanagementindrydirectseededriceunderscentedricewheatrotationofwesternindogangeticplains
AT ganieza herbicideoptionsforeffectiveweedmanagementindrydirectseededriceunderscentedricewheatrotationofwesternindogangeticplains
AT chauhanbs herbicideoptionsforeffectiveweedmanagementindrydirectseededriceunderscentedricewheatrotationofwesternindogangeticplains
AT guptark herbicideoptionsforeffectiveweedmanagementindrydirectseededriceunderscentedricewheatrotationofwesternindogangeticplains
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