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Article

Effect of nitrogen application timing on dry matter and nitrogen assimilation and partitioning in six wheat cultivars under rain-fed conditions of Jordan

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Pages 149-162 | Received 27 Sep 2007, Published online: 06 Mar 2008
 

Abstract

The current study was implemented to assess the effect of nitrogen (N) timing application and cultivars and their interaction on grain yield, and the amount of pre-anthesis dry matter (DM) and N accumulation as well as the remobilization of the assimilates to sink (i.e. grain) under rain-fed conditions of West Asia and North Africa (WANA) region. The treatments comprised of six wheat cultivars and two methods of N application timing (single and split N application). Nitrogen was applied at a rate of 40 kg N ha−1 (the recommended rate in Jordan) as diamonumphosphate (DAP) just before planting (i.e. single N application) or 20 kg ha−1 before planting as DAP plus 20 kg ha−1 top dressed at early boot stage as urea (i.e. split N application). The results suggest that single N application was relatively better than split N application in improving DM accumulation in vegetative parts at anthesis and maturity stages, grain and biological yield and N translocation efficiency (NTE). Cultivar NTE ranged from 73–80%, and the contribution of pre-anthesis assimilates to grain from 26–63%, indicating the importance of pre-anthesis accumulated assimilates for attaining high yield under semi-arid rain-fed-conditions of WANA region.

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