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Research Article

Does summer irrigation alter nitrogen uptake and utilisation efficiency of saffron (Crocus sativus L.) for different organic and chemical fertilisers?

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Pages 1754-1769 | Received 10 Dec 2019, Accepted 06 Aug 2020, Published online: 02 Sep 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Nutrient loss is one of the most important problems in saffron cultivation which affects saffron production. Summer irrigation during flower initiation period improves saffron yield but affects nutrient availability. This study aimed to evaluate the role of summer irrigation on saffron nitrogen (N) uptake and utilisation efficiency for different organic and chemical fertilisers. A three-year field experiment was conducted as split-plot under a randomised complete block design with three replications. Main plots were included the summer irrigation and no-summer irrigation, subdivided to five sub-plots including chemical fertiliser, vermicompost, cow manure, chicken manure, and control. The measured criteria were corm N concentration, N uptake efficiency (NUpE), N utilisation efficiency (NUtE), agronomic N use efficiency (AgNUE) and saffron corm and flower yield parameters. The results revealed that organic manures improved corm NUpE, NUtE and AgNUE. Plants had the highest NUpE under cow manure and utilised N more efficiently, resulted in the highest NUtE and AgNUE. Summer irrigation had implications for different organic fertilisers with a positive effect on vermicompost but a negative effect on chicken manure and chemical fertiliser. Dry stigma and corm yield were higher in vermicompost than chicken manure under summer irrigation, while it decreased with chemical fertilisation.

Disclosure statement

There is no conflict of interest.

Supplementary material

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Vice President for Research and Technology, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Iran [39927].

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