Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6375273 | Field Crops Research | 2013 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Sweet sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] is a biofuel crop, which can be grown under tropical rainfed conditions without sacrificing food and fodder security. Three sweet sorghum cultivars (CSH 22 SS, NTJ 2 and ICSV 93046) with two row spacings (60 and 45 cm) and six nitrogen levels (0, 30, 60, 90, 120, and 150 kg haâ1) were grown on Vertisols during three post rainy (November to April) seasons at the ICRISAT center farm in Patancheru, India. The results showed that the row spacings (60 or 45 cm) had no influence on performance of the cultivars. Sweet sorghum hybrid CSH 22 SS produced the highest green stalk yield (45.4 Mg haâ1) and grain yield (2.33 Mg haâ1) compared to NTJ 2 (32.66 Mg haâ1 and 1.70 Mg haâ1) and ICSV 93046 (38.44 Mg haâ1 and 2.03 Mg haâ1). Net economic return from CSH 22 SS (US$ 681 haâ1) was also significantly higher than that from NTJ 2 (US$ 415 haâ1) and ICSV 93046 (US$ 539 haâ1). All cultivars responded to applied N up to 150 kg haâ1; however beyond 90 kg haâ1 N rate, the increase in yield was insignificant. Estimated N use efficiency (NUE) values indicated that 90 kg N haâ1 was an optimum N level for sweet sorghum crop. Simulated soil water balance components revealed that reduction in total transpiration due to water stress was 20 to 45% compared to the no-stress. In case of water use efficiency, CSH 22 SS showed the highest economic returns per unit volume of water input. Based on these results, it is concluded that sweet sorghum hybrid CSH 22 SS at 90 kg N haâ1 is the best remunerative combination for maximizing yield, economic returns and resource use efficiency.
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Authors
G.L. Sawargaonkar, M.D. Patil, S.P. Wani, E. Pavani, B.V.S.R. Reddy, S. Marimuthu,