Effects of dates of sowing on phenology, thermal and radiation regimes, and yield of wheat*

Authors

  • S. A. KHAN Department of Agricultural Meteorology & Physics Bidhan Chandra Krishi Viswavidyalaya, Mohanpur-741 252 (West Bengal), India
  • H. C. MARAK Department of Agricultural Meteorology & Physics Bidhan Chandra Krishi Viswavidyalaya, Mohanpur-741 252 (West Bengal), India
  • A. GUPTA Department of Agricultural Meteorology & Physics Bidhan Chandra Krishi Viswavidyalaya, Mohanpur-741 252 (West Bengal), India
  • KUSHAL SARMAH Department of Agricultural Meteorology & Physics Bidhan Chandra Krishi Viswavidyalaya, Mohanpur-741 252 (West Bengal), India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54386/jam.v12i1.1269

Keywords:

GDD, PAR, phenology, wheat, yield and yield attributes

Abstract

To assess the effects of thermal and radiation regimes on wheat, a field experiment consisting of five dates of sowing starting from 20 November at weekly interval, was conducted. The crop sown on 20 November needed 113 days to attain maturity and with delay in sowing dates, maturity durations decreased upto 91 days in 18 December sown crop. The highest thermal and radiation regimes of 2095oC day for GDD, 15515oC day h for HTU, 31880oC day h for PTU and 2140 mmol m-2 for PAR were associated with maximum yield from crop sown on 20 November. Accumulated global radiation and PAR during vegetative phase showed significant positive correlation, but during reproductive and grain filling phases they exhibited significant negative correlation with dry matter. Accumulated GDD during vegetative, entire growth period and grain filling period registered significant positive correlation with grain yield. Accumulated HTU, PTU, global radiation and PAR, prevailing during reproductive and grain filling phases, showed significant negative association with grain yield. Because of higher values of HUE, HTUE, PTUE, RAUE and PARUE, in terms of grain yield, amounting to 0.1614 g m-2 GDD, 0.0219 g m-2 HTU, 0.0104 gm-2 PTU, 0.2220 g MJ-1 and 0.1599 g mmol-1, respectively, the 20 November sown crop was adjudged as the optimum time of sowing. R2 of regression models was significant at 1% level, accounting for 97 to 99% variation in total grain yield.

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Published

01-06-2010

How to Cite

S. A. KHAN, H. C. MARAK, A. GUPTA, & KUSHAL SARMAH. (2010). Effects of dates of sowing on phenology, thermal and radiation regimes, and yield of wheat*. Journal of Agrometeorology, 12(1), 53–57. https://doi.org/10.54386/jam.v12i1.1269

Issue

Section

Research Paper