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Comparison of direct drilling, reduced cultivation and ploughing on the growth of cereals

1. Spring barley on a sandy loam soil: introduction, aerial growth and agronomic aspects

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

J. G. Elliott
Affiliation:
Agricultural Research Council, Weed Research Organization, Begbroke Hill, Oxford 0X5 1PF
F. B. Ellis
Affiliation:
Agricultural Research Council, Letcombe Laboratory, Wantage 0X12 9JT
F. Pollard
Affiliation:
Agricultural Research Council, Weed Research Organization, Begbroke Hill, Oxford 0X5 1PF

Summary

An experiment on spring barley (cvs Impala and Julia) on sandy loam soil near Oxford was made from 1969 to 1973 to compare mouldboard ploughing, deep and shallow tined cultivation followed by conventional seed-bed preparation, and direct-drilling.

In 1969 fewer barley plants on the direct-drilled plots than on cultivated plots gave fewer fertile ears/m2 and significantly less grain. In 1970, 1972 and 1973 yields did not differ between treatments. In 1971 there were more ears/m2 and more grain was obtained from direct-drilled than from ploughed plots. Mean grain yields over 5 years did not differ significantly between cultivation treatments. Ploughing and deep tine cultivation resulted in better shoot growth early in the season, more straw and more dicotyledonous weeds than direct-drilling. In comparable tillage operations on the same farm considerably less energy was needed for direct-drilling than for mouldboard ploughing and conventional seed-bed preparation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1977

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