Turkish Journal of Field Crops

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INTERACTIVE EFFECTS OF N FERTILIZATION AND BRADIRHIZOBIA JAPANICUM ON AGRONOMICAL TRAITS OF SOYBEAN IN SALT AFFECTED SOILS

Inomjon ISRAILOV, Khamidulla SHERALIEV, Guliston ABDALOVA, Abduvali IMINOV, Kholik ALLANOV, Aziz KARIMOV, Botir KHAITOV, Young Chang KIM

Abstract

Soil salinity has enormous negative impact on crop productivity leading to food insecurity and malnutrition, especially in arid regions. The aim of this study was to elucidate the interactive effects of different N fertilization rates and Bradyrhizobium japonicum (Kirchner) on agronomic traits of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] in saline soils (EC 5.8 dS m-1). Field experiments were conducted during the summer seasons of 2018 and 2019 to evaluate the effects of various N fertilization rates such as no fertilization (control), N0Р90К60, N30Р90К60, N60Р90К60 individually and in tandem with B. japonicum as a seed bioinoculant. The experiment in a split-plot design, N fertilization as the main plot, the seed inoculation as the sub-plot was set up in three replicates. Soybean growth, nutrients uptake and yield parameters increased with increasing N fertilization rate, however, the effect was more pronounced with the seed inoculation. Averaged over the cropping seasons, yield was higher by 20.4%, 19.0%, 34.1% and 6.1% in the inoculated treatments of no-fertilization, N0Р90К60, N30Р90К60, N60Р90К60, respectively as compared to the similar fertilization treatments without the seed inoculation. The fertilization rate of N30Р90К60 with B. japonicum inoculation was recommended due to the high soybean yield and quality seeds as the crucial components of sustainable agricultural production under salt-stressed field conditions.

Keyword: Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Glycine max, N fertilization, salinity, plant growth, nutrient content, soybean, yield ,

Effects of Different Water Stress Levels on Biomass Yield and Agronomic Traits of Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) Varieties under Semi-Arid Conditio

Erdal GONULAL, Suleyman SOYLU, Mehmet SAHIN

Abstract

A field experiment was conducted in the Wielkopolska region at the Gorzyń Research Station, Poland (52.34°N, 15.54°E) in Central Europe. The study was conducted over a 3-year period (2017, 2018, 2019) as a two-factorial design with four replications in the RCBD. The aim of the research was to determine the effect of the cultivar (‘Bolero’, ‘Tytan’) and the inoculation (Nitragina–seeds inoculation, Nitroflora I–seeds inoculation, Nitroflora II–soil inoculation, HiStick® Lupin–seeds inoculation) on plant development, seeds chemical composition and yielding of narrow-leaved lupin. The weather conditions and experimental factors significantly influenced on productivity of narrow-leaved lupin ‘Tytan’. Drought during the growing season reduced seeds and protein yields. After inoculation of HiStck the seeds yield was significantly greater by 12.4% (p < 0.01) and the protein yield after application of Nitroflora I or HiStick by 13.9% (p < 0.01) and 19.2% (p < 0.01), respectively. Correlation coefficients showed strong relations between number of pods and seeds per plant in both cultivars regardless of the inoculation variant, however the strongest relations in both cultivar were proved on HiStick treatment.
Keyword: Biological nitrogen fixation, chemical composition, legumes, protein efficiency, yielding