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Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India

The winter maize area is rapidly spreading in south India in response to rising demand from the poultry and fish feed industries due to the absence of major environmental constraints. Further farmers’ are using the winter environment to expand maize area and production. Hence there is immense potent...

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Autores principales: Hulmani, Siddharth, Salakinkop, S. R., Somangouda, G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9302768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35862389
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266886
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author Hulmani, Siddharth
Salakinkop, S. R.
Somangouda, G.
author_facet Hulmani, Siddharth
Salakinkop, S. R.
Somangouda, G.
author_sort Hulmani, Siddharth
collection PubMed
description The winter maize area is rapidly spreading in south India in response to rising demand from the poultry and fish feed industries due to the absence of major environmental constraints. Further farmers’ are using the winter environment to expand maize area and production. Hence there is immense potential to increase the area under winter maize cultivation. There were no planned field experiments to explore and optimize the right time of sowing and quantity of fertilizer to be added previously due to the presence of negligible winter maize area. Farmers used to cultivate maize as per their choice of sowing time with the application of a quantity of fertilizer recommended for rainy season maize. There were no efforts made towards working on economic analysis including energy budgeting. And hence the investigation was conducted with the objective to explore the optimal planting period and fertilizer levels for winter maize through economic and energy budgeting. Planting windows (1st week of October, 2nd week of October, 3rd week of October, 4th week of October, and 5th week of October) and fertility levels (100 percent recommended dose of fertilizer (RDF), 150 percent RDF, and 200 percent RDF) were used as factors in Factorial Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD) with three replications. The present investigation revealed that significantly higher winter maize productivity was achieved from the first and second week of October planting along with the application of 200% RDF (recommended dose of fertilizer) followed by 150% RDF. Planting of winter maize during the first week of October recorded significantly higher grain yield (8786kg ha(-1)) and stover yield (1220 kg ha(-1)) and was found on par with sowing during the second week of October. Among fertility levels, significantly higher grain yield (8320 kg ha (-1)) and stover yield (1195 kg ha(-1)) was recorded with the application of 200% RDF and were found on par with the application of 150% RDF. Further interaction effect showed that higher dry matter production, more days for physiological maturity, higher accumulation of growing degree days, photothermal units, and heliothermal units were recorded from crops planted during the first and second week of October along with the application of either 200% or 150% RDF. However, higher nutrient use efficiency was recorded from the first and second week of October planted crop supplied with lower fertility level (100% RDF). Similarly, significantly higher net returns and gross returns, output energy, net energy, and specific energy were higher from crops planted during the first week of planting along with the application of 200% RDF. Whereas, energy use efficiency and energy productivity were higher with the first week of October planted crop applied with 100% RDF. From the overall interaction, it is recommended to plant winter maize during the first fortnight of October with the application of 150 percent RDF for sustaining higher maize productivity, energy output, and economics in the maize growing area of south India.
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spelling pubmed-93027682022-07-22 Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India Hulmani, Siddharth Salakinkop, S. R. Somangouda, G. PLoS One Research Article The winter maize area is rapidly spreading in south India in response to rising demand from the poultry and fish feed industries due to the absence of major environmental constraints. Further farmers’ are using the winter environment to expand maize area and production. Hence there is immense potential to increase the area under winter maize cultivation. There were no planned field experiments to explore and optimize the right time of sowing and quantity of fertilizer to be added previously due to the presence of negligible winter maize area. Farmers used to cultivate maize as per their choice of sowing time with the application of a quantity of fertilizer recommended for rainy season maize. There were no efforts made towards working on economic analysis including energy budgeting. And hence the investigation was conducted with the objective to explore the optimal planting period and fertilizer levels for winter maize through economic and energy budgeting. Planting windows (1st week of October, 2nd week of October, 3rd week of October, 4th week of October, and 5th week of October) and fertility levels (100 percent recommended dose of fertilizer (RDF), 150 percent RDF, and 200 percent RDF) were used as factors in Factorial Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD) with three replications. The present investigation revealed that significantly higher winter maize productivity was achieved from the first and second week of October planting along with the application of 200% RDF (recommended dose of fertilizer) followed by 150% RDF. Planting of winter maize during the first week of October recorded significantly higher grain yield (8786kg ha(-1)) and stover yield (1220 kg ha(-1)) and was found on par with sowing during the second week of October. Among fertility levels, significantly higher grain yield (8320 kg ha (-1)) and stover yield (1195 kg ha(-1)) was recorded with the application of 200% RDF and were found on par with the application of 150% RDF. Further interaction effect showed that higher dry matter production, more days for physiological maturity, higher accumulation of growing degree days, photothermal units, and heliothermal units were recorded from crops planted during the first and second week of October along with the application of either 200% or 150% RDF. However, higher nutrient use efficiency was recorded from the first and second week of October planted crop supplied with lower fertility level (100% RDF). Similarly, significantly higher net returns and gross returns, output energy, net energy, and specific energy were higher from crops planted during the first week of planting along with the application of 200% RDF. Whereas, energy use efficiency and energy productivity were higher with the first week of October planted crop applied with 100% RDF. From the overall interaction, it is recommended to plant winter maize during the first fortnight of October with the application of 150 percent RDF for sustaining higher maize productivity, energy output, and economics in the maize growing area of south India. Public Library of Science 2022-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9302768/ /pubmed/35862389 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266886 Text en © 2022 Hulmani et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hulmani, Siddharth
Salakinkop, S. R.
Somangouda, G.
Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India
title Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India
title_full Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India
title_fullStr Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India
title_full_unstemmed Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India
title_short Productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south India
title_sort productivity, nutrient use efficiency, energetic, and economics of winter maize in south india
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9302768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35862389
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266886
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