EFFICACY OF SEAWEED (KAPPAPHYCUS ALVAREZII) SAP ON CHLOROPHYLL CONTENT OF WHEAT (TRITICUM AESTIVAM L.) FLAG LEAF FLAG LEAF

Authors

  • SHIKHA SINGH
  • R. R. UPASANI
  • R R. THAKUR

Keywords:

Wheat, Flag leaf, Seaweedsap, Kappaphycus, Chlorophyll

Abstract

Field experiments conducted at Birsa Agricultural University Kanke, Ranchi, Jharkhand, during Rabi of 2013-14 and 2014-15 to find out whether application of seaweed sap (Kappaphycus alvarezii) at six concentration (0.0, 2.5, 5.0. 7.5, 10.0 and 15.0%) either as foliar spray alone or in combination with seed soaking at different fertilizer level (100 and 50% RDF), can influence chlorophyll content of wheat, reveals that Chlorophyll (a, b and total) content in wheat increasing with crop age from 2 to 9 DAF and thereafter it gradually decreased, due to senescence of leaf. Crop fertilized with 100% RDF maintained higher chlorophyll (a, b and total) in the flag leaf than 50% RDF. Chlorophyll content increased with increasing concentration of seaweed sap up to 7.5% and thereafter it gradually decreased. Application of 7.5%K sap along with 100% RDF recorded higher chlorophyll content (a, b and total) than other combinations. Application of 7.5 % K sap along with 50 % RDF was able to maintain similar chlorophyll (a, b and total) content as that of wheat fertilized with100 % RDF alone, indicating that 7.5 % K sap was capable enough to compensate the 50 % fertilizer requirement of wheat crop. Comparison of chlorophyll content estimated by DMSO and Chlorophyll meter were equally good.

Field experiments conducted at Birsa Agricultural University Kanke, Ranchi, Jharkhand, during Rabi of 2013-14 and 2014-15 to find out whether application of seaweed sap (Kappaphycus alvarezii) at six concentration (0.0, 2.5, 5.0. 7.5, 10.0 and 15.0%) either as foliar spray alone or in combination with seed soaking at different fertilizer level (100 and 50% RDF), can influence chlorophyll content of wheat, reveals that Chlorophyll (a, b and total) content in wheat increasing with crop age from 2 to 9 DAF and thereafter it gradually decreased, due to senescence of leaf. Crop fertilized with 100% RDF maintained higher chlorophyll (a, b and total) in the flag leaf than 50% RDF. Chlorophyll content increased with increasing concentration of seaweed sap up to 7.5% and thereafter it gradually decreased. Application of 7.5%K sap along with 100% RDF recorded higher chlorophyll content (a, b and total) than other combinations. Application of 7.5 % K sap along with 50 % RDF was able to maintain similar chlorophyll (a, b and total) content as that of wheat fertilized with100 % RDF alone, indicating that 7.5 % K sap was capable enough to compensate the 50 % fertilizer requirement of wheat crop. Comparison of chlorophyll content estimated by DMSO and Chlorophyll meter were equally good.

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Published

2016-02-14

How to Cite

SINGH, S., UPASANI, R. R., & R. THAKUR, R. (2016). EFFICACY OF SEAWEED (KAPPAPHYCUS ALVAREZII) SAP ON CHLOROPHYLL CONTENT OF WHEAT (TRITICUM AESTIVAM L.) FLAG LEAF FLAG LEAF. The Bioscan, 11(Supplement 1), 345–352. Retrieved from https://thebioscan.com/index.php/pub/article/view/981