Effects of cultural treatments on wheat and on the incidence of eyespot, lodging, take-all and weeds. Field Experiments 1945–8

A - Papers appearing in refereed journals

Glynne, M. D. 1951. Effects of cultural treatments on wheat and on the incidence of eyespot, lodging, take-all and weeds. Field Experiments 1945–8. Annals of Applied Biology - AAB. 38 (3), pp. 665-688. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7348.1951.tb07837.x

AuthorsGlynne, M. D.
Abstract

An experiment was made on the fourth, fifth and sixth successive crops of winter wheat to determine the effects of various treatments on the troubles which result from close cereal cropping. Eyespot and lodging were prevalent in the first year (1946); weeds in the second; eyespot, lodging, take-all and weeds in the third. Spraying with H2SO4 reduced the incidence of eyespot, lodging and weeds, and increased yield of grain on plots which received sulphate of ammonia (by 2.7, 2.2 and 10.0 cwt./acre in successive years). Sulphate of ammonia increased the incidence at harvest of eyespot and lodging, reduced take-all and consistently increased yield of straw. Eyespot and lodging reduced the effect of the fertilizer on yield of grain, take-all increased it. Increase in seed rate increased the incidence of severe eyespot and of take-all; it increased lodging except when plants were dwarfed by take-all. Weight of straw and percentage straws with severe eyespot lesions independently affected lodging, together accounting for 51% of the variance in percentage area lodged at harvest and 64 % of that lodged 33 days earlier. Mean yields of grain on untreated plots sown with 3.3 1/2 bushels seed/acre fell from 26.0 to 22.5 to 11.7 cwt./acre in successive years, whereas yields of 28.4, 29.9 and 29.1 cwt./acre were obtained on sprayed plots sown with 1 1/2.2 bushels seed/acre which received 4 cwt./acre sulphate of ammonia, showing that high yields were maintained when eyespot, lodging, take-all and weeds were controlled. By 1948 yields of grain on unsprayed plots had fallen to the level of those on similarly manured plots on the continuous wheat experiment on Broadbalk field. Spraying increased grain by amounts similar to those resulting from one year's fallow on Broadbalk; but fallow had its greatest effects on plots with low nitrogen, spraying on those with high nitrogen.

Year of Publication1951
JournalAnnals of Applied Biology - AAB
Journal citation38 (3), pp. 665-688
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7348.1951.tb07837.x
Open accessPublished as non-open access
ISSN00034746
PublisherWiley

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