Promotive and Inhibitory Effects of Rice Straw and Cellulose Application on Rice Plant Growth in Pot and Field Experiments
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
In a pot experiment, rice straw and cellulose were applied at the rates of 0.2 and 0.5% on a dry soil weight basis with two different incubation periods (2 months and 3 months) from their incorporation to rice transplanting. Seven treatments were designed as follows, T1, control; T2, straw 0.2%; T3, straw 0.5%; T4, cellulose 0.2%; T5, cellulose 0.5%; T6, straw 0.2%+inorganic N fertilizer; and T7, cellulose 0.2%+inorganic N fertilizer. T6 and T7 contained 50 mg N pot^<-1> of ammonium chloride (approximately 10 kg N ha^<-1>) in addition to straw and cellulose, respectively. Promotive and inhibitory effects of straw and cellulose application were observed and both were closely related to the incubation period. Straw application at 0.5% increased plant dry matter yield and N uptake compared to T1 and the promotive effect was more appreciable in the 3-month-incubation period than in the 2-month one (hereafter referred to as 3i and 2i, respectively). Cellulose application at 0.5% inhibited rice plant growth and the inhibitory effect was more severe in 2i than in 3i. The concentration of volatile fatty acids (VFA) in paddy soil was very low or VFA were not detectable after 2 months of incubation in all the treatments. In the field experiment, rice straw and cellulose were applied at the rates of 4 and 10 t ha^<-1>, which corresponded to 0.2 and 0.5% on a dry soil basis, respectively, under subtropical climate conditions. There were five treatments which were equivalent to T1 to T5 described above. Straw was applied 3 times continuously before the three rice cultivations, whereas cellulose was applied 2 times before the first and second cultivations. In the first cultivation, straw application at 10 t ha^<-1> increased straw and total dry matter yields compared with the control. In the second cultivation, straw application at 10 t ha^<-1> increased grain and total dry matter yields, whereas cellulose application retarded plant growth severely. Straw application at 10 t ha^<-1> tended to enhance the grain/straw ratio compared with the control in the second and third cultivations.
- 社団法人日本土壌肥料学会の論文
著者
-
Adachi Katsuki
Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences, Okinawa Subtropical Station
-
Senboku Toshihiro
Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences, Okinawa Subtropical Station
-
Adachi Katsuki
Japan International Research Center For Agricultural Sciences Okinawa Subtropical Station
-
Chaitep Waree
Phrae Rice Research Center:(present Address)sanpatong Rice Experiment Station
-
Senboku T
Japan International Research Center For Agricultural Sciences Okinawa Subtropical Station
関連論文
- Isolation and Some Properties of Methane-Oxidizing Bacteria from a Subtropical Paddy Field
- Promotive and Inhibitory Effects of Rice Straw and Cellulose Application on Rice Plant Growth in Pot and Field Experiments
- Effect of Application of Rice Straw and Cellulose on Methane Emission and Biological Nitrogen Fixation in a Subtropical Paddy Field : II. Enumeration of Populations of Methanogenic Bacteria by Most Probable Number Method and Roll Tube Method
- Effect of Application of Rice Straw and Cellulose on Methane Emission and Biological Nitrogen Fixation in a Subtropical Paddy Field : I. Methane Emission, Soil-ARA, and Rice Plant Growth
- Effect of Application of Rice Straw and Cellulose on Methane Emission and Biological Nitrogen Fixation in a Subtropical Paddy Field : III. Populations of Methane-Oxidizing Bacteria in Soil and Rice Rhizosphere
- 18 Klebsiella pneumoniae MISR 81 : An exopolysaccharides-overproducing strain isolated from rhizoplane of sugarcane grown in Egypt
- Differences in root exudates and root oxidative activities among rice cultivars in relation to methane emission(The Annual Meeting of the Society in 1998)
- Identification and quantification of auxins in culture medium of Azospirillum and Klebsiella and their effect on rice roots(The Annual Meeting of the Society in 1997)
- Response of lowland rice to inoculation with different plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria(The Annual Meeting of the Society in 1998)