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Response of Some Bread Wheat Cultivars to Irrigation Water Quality

Received: 25 September 2017    Accepted: 19 October 2017    Published: 8 November 2017
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Abstract

A field trial was conducted in a private farm at AL-Hur region, holy Kerbala governorate - Iraq during 2015-2016 growing season. Six bread wheat cultivars were grown, namely lpa-99 AL-Rasheed, Abu-Ghraib-3, AL-Fateh, AL-Hussein and Bohooth-22 and irrigated with three water qualities: fresh river water, drainage water and alternate irrigation (fresh river water and drainage water). The design was Randomized Complete Block Design (R.C.B. D) with three replicates. The objective was to investigate the effect of different irrigation water qualities on some tolerance and susceptibly criteria of these cultivars. Stress susceptibly index (SSI), stress tolerance index (STI), tolerance of cultivars: (TOI), yield index (YI) and yield stability index (YSI) were studied. Results indicated that AL-Hussein cultivar gave the highest values of grain yield (680.00, 655.00 and 569.33 g m-2) under fresh river water, alternate water and drainage water compared with the lowest values of AL-Rashid cultivar (527.33, 511.00 and 374.66 g m-2), respectively. The reduction of grain yield (g m-2) of AL Hussein was the lowest 16.28% compared with 35.64, 34.64, 33.00, 29.00 and 24.99% for Bohooth-22, Abu-Ghraib -3, AL-Fateh, AL-Rasheed and lpa-99, respectively. This means that AL-Hussain cultivar was the most tolerant to the salinity of irrigation water where it possessed the highest value 1.196 of stress tolerant index (STI) and the lowest value 0.094 of stress susceptibility index (STI) compared with other cultivars. The drainage water gave the lowest values of grain yield 429.33g m-2 compared with 601.22 g m-2 in fresh river water and the alternate water was in between 556.00 g m-2. It can be concluded, that a tolerant cultivar should be grown when salinized irrigation water is practiced.

Published in International Journal of Applied Agricultural Sciences (Volume 3, Issue 6)
DOI 10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11
Page(s) 143-147
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Bread Wheat, Water Quality, Stress Tolerance Index (STI), Stress Susceptibility Index (SSI), Yield Stability Index (YSI), Wheat Cultivars

References
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[2] FAO. (2013). The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2013: Economic growth is necessary but not sufficient to accelerate reduction of hunger and malnutrition. Rome, FAO.
[3] Miyamoto, S., Riley, T. Gobran, G. and Petticrew, J. (1986). Effects of saline water irrigation on soil salinity, pecan tree growth and nut production. Irrig. Sci., 7:83-95.
[4] Maas, E. V. (1986). Salt tolerance of plants. Applied Agricultural Research 1: 12-26.
[5] Esfandiari, E., Shekari, F., Shekari, F. and Esfandiari, M. (2007). The effect of salt stress on antioxidant enzymes activity and Lipid peroxidation on the Wheat seedling. Notulae Botanicae Horti Agrobotanici Cluj-Napoca, 35 (1):48-56.
[6] Moaveni, P. (2011). Effect of water deficit stress on some physiological traits of wheat (Triticum aestivum). Agricul. Sci. Res. J., 1: 64 - 68.
[7] Francois, L. E. (1994). Yield and quality response of salt-stressed garlic. Hort. Science, 29:1314-1317.
[8] Fischer, R. A. and Maurer, R. (1978). Drought resistance in spring wheat cultivars. I. Grain yield response. Aust. J. Agric. Res., 29:897- 907.
[9] Fernandez, G. C. J. (1992). Effective selection criteria for assessing plant stress tolerance. In: proc, of the Int. Symp. On adaptation of vegetables and other food crops in temperature and water stress. Tqiwan: 257-270.
[10] Hossain, A. B., Sears, A. G., Cox, T. S. and Paulsen, G. M. (1990). Desiccation tolerance and its relationship to assimilate partitioning in winter wheat. Crop Sci., 30:622-627.
[11] Gavuzzi, P., Rizza, F., Palumbo, M., Campaline, R. G., Ricciardi, G. L. and Borghi, B. (1997). Evaluation of field and laboratory predictors of drought and heat tolerance in winter cereals. Plant Sci., 77:523-531.
[12] Bouslama, M. and Schapaugh, W. T. (1984). Stress tolerance in soybean. Part 1: evaluation of three screening techniques for heat and drought tolerance. Crop Sci., 24:933-937.
[13] Abdoun H. Alwan, Khalid A. Hussein and Khudhair A. Jaddoa. (2015). Effect of chloride on response of two Wheat cultivars (Triticum aestivum L.) at germination and early seedling stages. International Journal of Applied Agricultural Sciences, 1 (3): 60-65.
[14] Mohan, M. M., Lakshmi, S. N., Ibrahim, S. A. (2000). Chlorophyll stability Index (CTI): its impact on salt tolerance in rice. IRRI news letter, 38-39 pp.
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    Khudhair Abbas Jaddoa, Abdoun Hashim Alwan, Khalid Ali Hussein. (2017). Response of Some Bread Wheat Cultivars to Irrigation Water Quality. International Journal of Applied Agricultural Sciences, 3(6), 143-147. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11

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    ACS Style

    Khudhair Abbas Jaddoa; Abdoun Hashim Alwan; Khalid Ali Hussein. Response of Some Bread Wheat Cultivars to Irrigation Water Quality. Int. J. Appl. Agric. Sci. 2017, 3(6), 143-147. doi: 10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11

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    AMA Style

    Khudhair Abbas Jaddoa, Abdoun Hashim Alwan, Khalid Ali Hussein. Response of Some Bread Wheat Cultivars to Irrigation Water Quality. Int J Appl Agric Sci. 2017;3(6):143-147. doi: 10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11,
      author = {Khudhair Abbas Jaddoa and Abdoun Hashim Alwan and Khalid Ali Hussein},
      title = {Response of Some Bread Wheat Cultivars to Irrigation Water Quality},
      journal = {International Journal of Applied Agricultural Sciences},
      volume = {3},
      number = {6},
      pages = {143-147},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijaas.20170306.11},
      abstract = {A field trial was conducted in a private farm at AL-Hur region, holy Kerbala governorate - Iraq during 2015-2016 growing season. Six bread wheat cultivars were grown, namely lpa-99 AL-Rasheed, Abu-Ghraib-3, AL-Fateh, AL-Hussein and Bohooth-22 and irrigated with three water qualities: fresh river water, drainage water and alternate irrigation (fresh river water and drainage water). The design was Randomized Complete Block Design (R.C.B. D) with three replicates. The objective was to investigate the effect of different irrigation water qualities on some tolerance and susceptibly criteria of these cultivars. Stress susceptibly index (SSI), stress tolerance index (STI), tolerance of cultivars: (TOI), yield index (YI) and yield stability index (YSI) were studied. Results indicated that AL-Hussein cultivar gave the highest values of grain yield (680.00, 655.00 and 569.33 g m-2) under fresh river water, alternate water and drainage water compared with the lowest values of AL-Rashid cultivar (527.33, 511.00 and 374.66 g m-2), respectively. The reduction of grain yield (g m-2) of AL Hussein was the lowest 16.28% compared with 35.64, 34.64, 33.00, 29.00 and 24.99% for Bohooth-22, Abu-Ghraib -3, AL-Fateh, AL-Rasheed and lpa-99, respectively. This means that AL-Hussain cultivar was the most tolerant to the salinity of irrigation water where it possessed the highest value 1.196 of stress tolerant index (STI) and the lowest value 0.094 of stress susceptibility index (STI) compared with other cultivars. The drainage water gave the lowest values of grain yield 429.33g m-2 compared with 601.22 g m-2 in fresh river water and the alternate water was in between 556.00 g m-2. It can be concluded, that a tolerant cultivar should be grown when salinized irrigation water is practiced.},
     year = {2017}
    }
    

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  • TY  - JOUR
    T1  - Response of Some Bread Wheat Cultivars to Irrigation Water Quality
    AU  - Khudhair Abbas Jaddoa
    AU  - Abdoun Hashim Alwan
    AU  - Khalid Ali Hussein
    Y1  - 2017/11/08
    PY  - 2017
    N1  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11
    DO  - 10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11
    T2  - International Journal of Applied Agricultural Sciences
    JF  - International Journal of Applied Agricultural Sciences
    JO  - International Journal of Applied Agricultural Sciences
    SP  - 143
    EP  - 147
    PB  - Science Publishing Group
    SN  - 2469-7885
    UR  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijaas.20170306.11
    AB  - A field trial was conducted in a private farm at AL-Hur region, holy Kerbala governorate - Iraq during 2015-2016 growing season. Six bread wheat cultivars were grown, namely lpa-99 AL-Rasheed, Abu-Ghraib-3, AL-Fateh, AL-Hussein and Bohooth-22 and irrigated with three water qualities: fresh river water, drainage water and alternate irrigation (fresh river water and drainage water). The design was Randomized Complete Block Design (R.C.B. D) with three replicates. The objective was to investigate the effect of different irrigation water qualities on some tolerance and susceptibly criteria of these cultivars. Stress susceptibly index (SSI), stress tolerance index (STI), tolerance of cultivars: (TOI), yield index (YI) and yield stability index (YSI) were studied. Results indicated that AL-Hussein cultivar gave the highest values of grain yield (680.00, 655.00 and 569.33 g m-2) under fresh river water, alternate water and drainage water compared with the lowest values of AL-Rashid cultivar (527.33, 511.00 and 374.66 g m-2), respectively. The reduction of grain yield (g m-2) of AL Hussein was the lowest 16.28% compared with 35.64, 34.64, 33.00, 29.00 and 24.99% for Bohooth-22, Abu-Ghraib -3, AL-Fateh, AL-Rasheed and lpa-99, respectively. This means that AL-Hussain cultivar was the most tolerant to the salinity of irrigation water where it possessed the highest value 1.196 of stress tolerant index (STI) and the lowest value 0.094 of stress susceptibility index (STI) compared with other cultivars. The drainage water gave the lowest values of grain yield 429.33g m-2 compared with 601.22 g m-2 in fresh river water and the alternate water was in between 556.00 g m-2. It can be concluded, that a tolerant cultivar should be grown when salinized irrigation water is practiced.
    VL  - 3
    IS  - 6
    ER  - 

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Author Information
  • Department of Field Crop Science, College of Agriculture, University of Baghdad, Baghdad, Iraq

  • Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Kerbala, Kerbala, Iraq

  • Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Kerbala, Kerbala, Iraq

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