Utilization of thinned cotton plants through bare-root transplanting coupled with foliar application of nutrients

Other Title(s)

الاستفادة من نباتات الخف عارية الجذور في القطن عن طريق الشتل و التسميد الورقي

Time cited in Arcif : 
1

Joint Authors

Nawar, Ali Isa
Zayd, Mahmud Muhammad
Hamid, Muna Muhammad

Source

Alexandria Science Exchange Journal

Issue

Vol. 39, Issue 1 (31 Mar. 2018), pp.48-55, 8 p.

Publisher

Alexandria University Faculty of Agriculture Prof Dr. A. M. Balba Society for Soil and Water Research

Publication Date

2018-03-31

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

8

Main Subjects

Agriculture

Abstract EN

A two year experiment was conducted to investigate the possibility of transplanting cotton plants of the cnltivars Giza S6 and Giza 88 thinned from hills grown in the permanent field.

The bare-root transplants (BRT) were thinned at the age of 50 days and transplants received three different foliar applications of macro- and micro-nutrients as compared to the direct seeded pbnts.

The BRT method with five foliar applications of macronutrients and two foliar applications of micronutrients significantly improved survival rate of seedlings and surpassed the directly sown pbnts in seed- cotton yield and its components.

Increase in yield was 11.4** for Giza 86 and 4.9*0 for Giza 88.

No effects for transplanting on fiber properties were observed for the cultivar Giza 88.

The BRT method with seven foliar applications was suggested as a practical and affordable method for cotton transplanting compared to potted- transplanting (PT).

These results have positive implications on the utilization of plants that are usually wasted by the thinning process (about 60-70H) in the direct seed sowing method, especially in areas devoted for cultivars' seed multiplication.

A second application of the BRT method is identical to the PT method but rather cheaper, where nurseries (as in rice transplanting) could be grown directly in the permanent field, allowing the preceding winter crops to reach maturity, while cotton nurseries are grown on the optimum sowing date during March.

Thus the main goal of the transplanting process Mould lie achieved, namely; 70% lot* amount of needs would be required for sowing annually.

This implies that demand on seeds produced by the government will decline by the same rate and thus more focus on seed quality and genetic purity, rather than seed mass production, could be achieved.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Nawar, Ali Isa& Zayd, Mahmud Muhammad& Hamid, Muna Muhammad. 2018. Utilization of thinned cotton plants through bare-root transplanting coupled with foliar application of nutrients. Alexandria Science Exchange Journal،Vol. 39, no. 1, pp.48-55.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-952438

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Nawar, Ali Isa…[et al.]. Utilization of thinned cotton plants through bare-root transplanting coupled with foliar application of nutrients. Alexandria Science Exchange Journal Vol. 39, no. 1 (Jan. / Mar. 2018), pp.48-55.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-952438

American Medical Association (AMA)

Nawar, Ali Isa& Zayd, Mahmud Muhammad& Hamid, Muna Muhammad. Utilization of thinned cotton plants through bare-root transplanting coupled with foliar application of nutrients. Alexandria Science Exchange Journal. 2018. Vol. 39, no. 1, pp.48-55.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-952438

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Record ID

BIM-952438