Arkel, H. van (1979) Weed control in cold tolerant sorghum. Tropical Agriculture, 56 (2). pp. 105-109.
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Abstract
Two field experiments were conducted in Kenya to investigate the effects of weed control on the yield and forage quality of newly introduced cold tolerant high altitude sorghums, using weed control methods in current use for maize production. All methods of weed control yielded considerably more than the control. The pre-emergence application of atrazine at 2.0 kg a.i./ha was the preferred method, and the sorghum cultivars studied proved tolerant to this rate of application. When plant populations were reduced by herbicide toxicity, the surviving sorghum plants produced more tillers, thus partly offsetting the effect on yield. Cultivars with a genetic ability to produce many tillers had an advantage over those which tiller less readily. The grain type cultivars studied belonged to the 2nd group, while the forage type sorghums belonged to the first
Item Type: | Article |
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Author Affiliation: | UNDP/FAO Kenya Sorghum and Millets Department Project, P.O. Box 1275, Nakuru, Kenya |
Subjects: | Plant Protection |
Divisions: | Millet Sorghum |
Depositing User: | Ms K Syamalamba |
Date Deposited: | 14 Nov 2012 07:43 |
Last Modified: | 14 Nov 2012 07:43 |
URI: | http://eprints.icrisat.ac.in/id/eprint/8773 |
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