Effect of nitrogen and weed-control practices on performance of irrigated direct-seeded rice (Oryza sativa)

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Abstract

A field experiment was conducted during rainy (kharif) season of 2002 and 2003 at Faizabad in silty loam soil to study the effect of nitrogen and weed-control measures on weed growth and yield of direct-seeded rice (Oryza sativa L.). There was significant increase in grain and straw yields as well as yield attributes, viz. panicles/m2 and test weight, with every increase in dose of N up to 120 kg/ha. The weed-control treatments significantly decreased the weed population, dry weight of weeds and weed index and increased the weed-control efficiency, panicles/m2, grain yield and straw yield compared with the unweeded check. Application of anilofos @ 0.4 kg/ha + one hand-weeding at 30 days after sowing remained on a par with that of weed-free treatment for all the parameters, recording grain yield of 5.13 t/ha and weed-control efficiency of 85.27%. Weed infestation reduced the grain yield by 64.42 and 64.41% and removed N up to 63.94 and 53.27 kg/ha under unweeded check during the first and second year, respectively. There was response up to 120 kg N/ha in the well-managed weed-control plots.

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Singh, K., & Tripathi, H. P. (2007). Effect of nitrogen and weed-control practices on performance of irrigated direct-seeded rice (Oryza sativa). Indian Journal of Agronomy, 52(3), 231–234. https://doi.org/10.59797/ija.v52i3.4930

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