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Effect of Low Temperature of Irrigation Water on Rice Growth and Nutrient Uptake
47
Citations
6
References
1994
Year
Uptake BehaviorEngineeringAgricultural EconomicsCrop PhysiologyCold TemperatureLow TemperatureIrrigation ManagementAgricultural Water ManagementWater TreatmentPlant NutritionPublic HealthCrop Water RelationIrrigationWater QualityNutrient UptakeEnvironmental EngineeringWater ManagementCold Irrigation WaterIrrigation WaterPlant Physiology
Abstract The study was designed to investigate the effect of cold irrigation water on rice growth and on uptake of N, P, K and Zn applied ca. 50, 20, 35 and 5 mg kg −1 soil, respectively. Cold temperature of irrigation water reduced rice shoot and root dry weight and plant height, significantly compared to hot temperature treatment. Under low temperature stress N was a major rice growth determinant. Increased shoot concentrations of both P and Zn allevated the low temperature stress. The uptake of N, P, K and Zn reduced significantly at low temperature (16.5–20 °C soil and 20–24 °C flood water) compared to high temperature (24.5–27 °C soil and 26.5–29.0 °C), with the strongest effect being noticed for N, followed by P, K and Zn. Application of N, P, K and Zn increased their uptake in rice shoots. Nitrogen and K had synergistic effect on their uptake. Responses to N and K application and their uptake behavior were well marked at higher than at low temperature whereas reverse was true for P and Zn.
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