4.7 Article

Fungicide Application Affects Nitrogen Utilization Efficiency, Grain Yield, and Quality of Winter Wheat

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy11071295

Keywords

nitrogen fertilization; fungicide treatment; cropping systems; yield components; yield performance; yield stability

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry for Research and Education (BMBF), IPAS Program [031A354C]

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Nitrogen is crucial for crop production, affecting wheat yield and grain quality. This study found that the interaction between nitrogen and fungicide had a synergistic effect on grain yield, with significantly higher yields when both were applied. Additionally, newer wheat cultivars showed improved performance in agronomic traits compared to older cultivars, indicating the importance of cultivar selection for optimized resource use efficiency.
Nitrogen (N) is a vital component of crop production. Wheat yield varies significantly under different soil available N. Knowing how wheat responds to or interacts with N to produce grains is essential in the selection of N use efficient cultivars. We assessed in this study variations among wheat genotypes for productivity-related traits under three cropping systems (CS), high-nitrogen with fungicide (HN-WF), high-nitrogen without fungicide (HN-NF) and low-nitrogen without fungicide (LN-NF) in the 2015, 2016 and 2017 seasons. ANOVA results showed genotypes, CS, and their interactions significantly affected agronomic traits. Grain yield (GY) increased with higher leaf chlorophyll content, importantly under CS without N and fungicide supply. Yellow rust disease reduced the GY by 20% and 28% in 2015 and 2016, respectively. Moreover, averaged over growing seasons, GY was increased by 23.78% under CS with N supply, while it was greatly increased, by 52.84%, under CS with both N and fungicide application, indicating a synergistic effect of N and fungicide on GY. Fungicide supply greatly improved the crop ability to accumulate N during grain filling, and hence the grain protein content. Recently released cultivars outperformed the older ones in most agronomic traits including GY. Genotype performance and stability analysis for GY production showed differences in their stability levels under the three CS. The synergistic effect of nitrogen and fungicide on grain yield (GY) and the differences in yield stability levels of recently released wheat cultivars across three CS found in this study suggest that resource use efficiency can be improved via cultivar selection for targeted CS.

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