Farmer’s Participatory Site Specific Nutrient Management in Tidal Flooded Soil for High Yielding Aus Rice

Authors

  • M Sh Islam PSO, Bangladesh Rice Research Institute Regional Station, Rangpur
  • MNH Mahmud Senior Scientific Officer, Irrigation and Water Management Division, Bangladesh Rice Research Institute, Gazipur 1701
  • F Rahman Soil Science Division, Bangladesh Rice Research Institute, Gazipur 1701
  • MA Saleque Coordinator for Advanced Studies and Research, Bangladesh RiceResearch Institute, Gazipur 1701

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3329/brj.v17i1-2.20838

Keywords:

Soil fertility grade, fertilizer dose, grain yield, relative yield

Abstract

Experiments were conducted in farmers fields at Bakergonj, Barisal and Kathaltoli, Potuakhali districts to develop site-specific nutrient management package for high yielding aus rice. The participating farmers delineated soil fertility as the most fertile (grade I), medium fertile (grade II) and the least fertile (grade III) soil. Omissions of N, P, and K were compared with added NPK fertilizers in different fertility grades. At Bakergonj, the NPK treat plots yielded 4.29, 4.36 and 2.09 t ha1 in soil grade I, II and III, respectively. Omission of N, P and K reduced grain yield by 0.76, 0.95 and 0.29 t ha-1 in grade I, 1.53, 0.87 and 1.25 t ha-1 in grade II and 0.64, 0 and 0.28 t ha-1 in grade III, respectively. At Kathaltoli, the grain yield (6.21 t ha1) in grade I was higher than grade II (5.58 t ha1) and grade III (5.11 t ha1). Omission of N, P and K reduced grain yield by 0.93, 0.18 and 0.09 t ha-1 in grade I, 1.30, 0.37 and 0.93 t ha-1 in grade II and 1.86, 1.30 and 1.30 t ha-1 in grade III, respectively. For Bakergonj, the calculated optimum doses of N were 34, 69 and 29 kg ha1, P were 4.0, 4.0 and 0.0 kg ha-1 and K were 7.0, 31.0 and 7.0 kg ha1 for fertility grade I, II and III, respectively. For Kathaltoli, the calculated optimum doses of N were 42, 59 and 84 kg ha1, P were 1.0, 2.0 and 5.0 kg ha-1 and K were 2.0, 23.0 and 33.0 kg ha1 for fertility grade I, II and III, respectively. The application of predicted fertilizer dose might increase rice yield in all fertility grades of soil in both the locations.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/brj.v17i1-2.20838

Bangladesh Rice j. 2013, 17(1&2): 1-6

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
168
PDF
138

Downloads

Published

2014-11-10

How to Cite

Islam, M. S., Mahmud, M., Rahman, F., & Saleque, M. (2014). Farmer’s Participatory Site Specific Nutrient Management in Tidal Flooded Soil for High Yielding Aus Rice. Bangladesh Rice Journal, 17(1-2), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.3329/brj.v17i1-2.20838

Issue

Section

Articles