2016
DOI: 10.21608/jpp.2016.47072
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Effect of Crop Sequenceof Rice, Maize and Fahll Berseem Residues on Wheat Productivity and Soil Fertility

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Andrii et al (2021) indicated that wheat crop sown after soybean, gained the maximum yield (5.77ton ha -1 ). Similar results were obtained by Hamdany et al (2016), Abomarzoka & Hamadny (2017), Gad et al (2018) and Abd Allah et al (2020).…”
Section: Yield and Yield Components Effect Of Preceding Cropssupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…Andrii et al (2021) indicated that wheat crop sown after soybean, gained the maximum yield (5.77ton ha -1 ). Similar results were obtained by Hamdany et al (2016), Abomarzoka & Hamadny (2017), Gad et al (2018) and Abd Allah et al (2020).…”
Section: Yield and Yield Components Effect Of Preceding Cropssupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Also, Hamd Alla et al (2015) illustrated that planting cereals on the same piece of land annually leads to an imbalance in soil fertility and a decline in productivity of crops. Hamdany et al (2016) indicated that the highest values of cereal units, economic evaluation, net return and improved physical and chemical properties of soil for the next planting resulted from the crop sequence corn followed by fahal berseem one cut followed by wheat compared the other treatments in both seasons. Growing wheat after soybean and clover (as legume crops) increased plant height, number of spikes m -2 , number of spikelets spike -1 , number of grains spike -1 , spike length, grain weight spike -1 , 1000-grain weight, straw yield, and grain yield (Abomarzoka & Hamadny, 2017;Gad et al, 2018;Abd Allah et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The Egyptian clover single cut variety (JBSC-1) suitable for Indian farming situation with a duration of 70-80 days, can fit in the existing food-fodder based systems (DACFW 2018). In addition, it can replenish the soil nutrients when grown between two cereal crops (Hamdany et al 2016) and provides high-quality forage (crude protein, 19-24%) suitable both for fresh feeding and hay. The single cut Egyptian clover (SEC) varieties are commonly cultivated in Egypt prior to major summer crops as a catch crop (Salama and Nawar 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This cultivation may occur after the removal of short‐season summer crops, such as rice and fodder maize at end‐August and prior to wheat cultivation in mid‐November. In addition, it will replenish the soil nutrients between two grass crops (Hamdany et al, 2016) and provide an amount of high‐quality forage suitable for fresh feeding and hay or silage making. While the basic package of recommendations for 'Meskawi' berseem clover is well identified, there is a deficit in the essential knowledge that allows for a profitable utilization of 'Fahl' berseem clover in the Egyptian agricultural system.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%