Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats

New semiDwarf wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars and new land management practices for Vertisols are being introduced in Ethiopia. Our objectives were to (i) determine the variation of N and P contents and concentration in the grain and whether these are related to grain yield, (ii) test cultiva...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schulthess, Urs C., Feil, B., Jutzi, S.C.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28160
_version_ 1855516147489701888
author Schulthess, Urs C.
Feil, B.
Jutzi, S.C.
author_browse Feil, B.
Jutzi, S.C.
Schulthess, Urs C.
author_facet Schulthess, Urs C.
Feil, B.
Jutzi, S.C.
author_sort Schulthess, Urs C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description New semiDwarf wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars and new land management practices for Vertisols are being introduced in Ethiopia. Our objectives were to (i) determine the variation of N and P contents and concentration in the grain and whether these are related to grain yield, (ii) test cultivar response to different fertility levels, and (iii) assess component traits of N and P yield. Five bread wheat cultivars and three durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) cultivars were sown in Ex1 at three locations in Ethiopia on two dates. In Ex2, seven of these cultivars were grown on a P-deficient soil at four N levels (0, 20.5, 41, 61.5 kg N ha-1) and four P levels (0, 10, 20, 30 kg P ha-1); in Ex3, two cultivars were grown in all possible combinations of the same four N and P levels. Grain yields did not differ among cultivars, but significant variations were found for total shoot N and P, grain N and P yield, and grain N and P concentration. Cultivar differences in these traits were fairly consistent across the treatments and were corroborated by Ex3. The N and P concentrations in the grain were not related to grain yield (r=0.36 NS for N; r=0.28 NS for P). There was a positive association between grain N and P concentrations in Ex1 (r=0.66; P=0.001). However, postanthesis accumulation of N was more closely related to postanthesis dry matter accumulation (r=0.84; P<0.05) than to the postanthesis accumulation of P (r=0.56 NS). Total shoot P varied by as much as 50 percent. Thus, cultivar choice is an important factor determining removal of P from the soil.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace28160
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1997
publishDateRange 1997
publishDateSort 1997
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace281602023-02-15T09:48:54Z Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats Schulthess, Urs C. Feil, B. Jutzi, S.C. wheats nitrogen phosphorus vertisols plant nutrition fertilizers varieties New semiDwarf wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars and new land management practices for Vertisols are being introduced in Ethiopia. Our objectives were to (i) determine the variation of N and P contents and concentration in the grain and whether these are related to grain yield, (ii) test cultivar response to different fertility levels, and (iii) assess component traits of N and P yield. Five bread wheat cultivars and three durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) cultivars were sown in Ex1 at three locations in Ethiopia on two dates. In Ex2, seven of these cultivars were grown on a P-deficient soil at four N levels (0, 20.5, 41, 61.5 kg N ha-1) and four P levels (0, 10, 20, 30 kg P ha-1); in Ex3, two cultivars were grown in all possible combinations of the same four N and P levels. Grain yields did not differ among cultivars, but significant variations were found for total shoot N and P, grain N and P yield, and grain N and P concentration. Cultivar differences in these traits were fairly consistent across the treatments and were corroborated by Ex3. The N and P concentrations in the grain were not related to grain yield (r=0.36 NS for N; r=0.28 NS for P). There was a positive association between grain N and P concentrations in Ex1 (r=0.66; P=0.001). However, postanthesis accumulation of N was more closely related to postanthesis dry matter accumulation (r=0.84; P<0.05) than to the postanthesis accumulation of P (r=0.56 NS). Total shoot P varied by as much as 50 percent. Thus, cultivar choice is an important factor determining removal of P from the soil. 1997 2013-05-06T07:00:02Z 2013-05-06T07:00:02Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28160 en Limited Access Agronomy Journal;89(3): 497-506
spellingShingle wheats
nitrogen
phosphorus
vertisols
plant nutrition
fertilizers
varieties
Schulthess, Urs C.
Feil, B.
Jutzi, S.C.
Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats
title Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats
title_full Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats
title_fullStr Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats
title_full_unstemmed Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats
title_short Yield-independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among Ethiopian wheats
title_sort yield independent variation in grain nitrogen and phosphorus concentration among ethiopian wheats
topic wheats
nitrogen
phosphorus
vertisols
plant nutrition
fertilizers
varieties
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28160
work_keys_str_mv AT schulthessursc yieldindependentvariationingrainnitrogenandphosphorusconcentrationamongethiopianwheats
AT feilb yieldindependentvariationingrainnitrogenandphosphorusconcentrationamongethiopianwheats
AT jutzisc yieldindependentvariationingrainnitrogenandphosphorusconcentrationamongethiopianwheats