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  4. How Weather and Fertilization Affected Grain Yield and Stability of Winter Wheat in a Long-Term Trial in the South Moravian Region, Czech Republic
 
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How Weather and Fertilization Affected Grain Yield and Stability of Winter Wheat in a Long-Term Trial in the South Moravian Region, Czech Republic

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2023
Author
Hlisnikovský, Lukáš
Menšík, Ladislav
Barłóg, Przemysław 
Kunzová, Eva
Faculty
Wydział Rolnictwa, Ogrodnictwa i Biotechnologii
Journal
Agronomy
ISSN
2073-4395
DOI
10.3390/agronomy13092293
Web address
http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/13/9/2293
Volume
13
Number
9
Pages from-to
art. 2293
Abstract (EN)
We evaluated the impact of weather and fertilization treatments (Control, PK, NPK1, NPK2, and NPK3) on winter wheat grain yields in a long-term trial in Ivanovice, Czech Republic, established in 1956. A total of 15 seasons were evaluated. The mean, maximal, and minimal temperatures in Ivanovice have been significantly increasing since 1961, with annual increases of 0.04 °C, 0.03 °C, and 0.05 °C, respectively. Precipitation has been decreasing annually by −0.54 mm (trend is insignificant). Four significant correlations between weather and grain yield were recorded. There were positive correlations between mean (r = 0.7) and minimal (r = 0.5) temperatures in November and negative correlations between mean temperatures in May (r = −0.6) and June (r = −0.6). The combination of naturally fertile chernozem soil and a beneficial preceding crop (alfalfa) enables sustainable cultivation of wheat, even without mineral fertilizers. The application of mineral nitrogen (N) significantly increases wheat grain yield and yield stability. Without mineral N or with high doses of mineral N, yield stability decreases. According to two response models (quadratic and quadratic-plateau), a reasonable dose of fertilizer is 107 kg ha−1 N for modern wheat varieties, corresponding to a yield of 8.1 t ha−1.
Keywords (EN)
  • Triticum aestivum L.

  • temperature

  • precipitation

  • mineral nitrogen

  • climate change

  • inter-25 annual variability

  • nonlinear response models

  • alfalfa

  • long-term field trial

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
August 30, 2023
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