Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/30183
Title: Yield and water use efficiency of maize under deficit irrigation regimes in a sub-humid climate
Authors: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Mustafakemalpaşa Meslek Yüksekokulu/Bitkisel Üretim Bölümü.
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Ziraat Fakültesi/Biyosistem Mühendisliği Bölümü.
Kuşçu, Hayrettin
Demir, Ali Osman
AAH-4682-2021
23667971600
7102184446
Keywords: Agriculture
Deficit irrigation
Evapotranspiration
Irrigation water use efficiency
Maize
Yield response factor
Zea mays L.
Drip irrigation
Sweet corn
Subsurface
Crop
Evapotranspiration
Stress
Issue Date: Mar-2013
Publisher: Univ Philippines Los Banos
Citation: Kuşçu, H. ve Demir, A. O. (2013). "Yield and water use efficiency of maize under deficit irrigation regimes in a sub-humid climate". Philippine Agricultural Scientist, 96(1), 32-41.
Abstract: The responses of maize grain and dry matter yields to timing and severity of water deficit in a sub-humid environment were studied in the field for two seasons. Seventeen irrigation treatments were applied to maize grown on clay-loam soil, at three critical development stages: vegetative, flowering and grain-filling. The grain and dry matter yields increased with the amount of irrigation water. In both seasons, the highest grain yields were obtained from full irrigation at each stage. Yields were reduced in all the other treatments in which water was limited in all or in part of the development stages. Yield response factor (ky) was separately calculated for the individual growth stages and for the total growing season, and was found to be 0.90, 1.12 (the highest value) and 0.87 (the lowest value) for the total growing season, flowering, and flowering and grain-filling combination stages, respectively. Maximum values of both water use efficiency and irrigation water use efficiency for grain yield under irrigation conditions were obtained as 2.05 kg m(-3) and 1.62 kg m(-3) from treatments of full irrigation at the flowering and grain-filling stages, and from full irrigation at the vegetative and flowering stages, respectively. Full irrigation during the total growing season was found to be the most appropriate choice for maximum grain yield under the local conditions, but these irrigation programs must be reconsidered in areas where water resources are more limited. Our data suggest that water stress should be scheduled on the grain-filling stage in the case of limited water or water scarcity. Withdrawal of irrigation water during the flowering stage was not a good strategy under the conditions of this study.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/30183
ISSN: 0031-7454
Appears in Collections:Scopus
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