Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply

Areas with Aruana grass (Panicum maximum Jacq.) in Brazilian pastures, especially those used by sheep, have expanded due to yield and morphological characteristics of this grass that are favorable to these animals. Nevertheless, the knowledge concerning yield attributes of this grass in relation to nitrogen fertilization is very limited. The objective of this research was to evaluate yield and physiological attributes in this forage grass when grown in nutrient solutions containing N rates. The experiment was carried out in a greenhouse with plastic pots containing ground quartz as substrate, during the Spring season. Six N rates in the solution (14, 112, 210, 294, 378, and 462 mg L-1), with 70% N-NO3- and 30% N-NH4+ were tested. Experimental units were set up in a completely randomized block design, with four replications. Plants were harvested at 35 days after the seedlings were transplanted to the pots and again at 28 days after the first harvest. After the second harvest, the roots were taken from the substrate. In both growing periods, dry matter yield for plant tops and roots, leaf area, number of expanded green leaves, number of tillers, leaf appearance rate, and phyllochron were significantly affected by the N rates, and the data were adjusted to a second-order model. Aruana grass required high rates of N to show maximum response in those variables.

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Main Authors: Lavres Jr.,José, Ferragine,Maria Del Carmen, Gerdes,Luciana, Raposo,Roberto Wagner Cavalcanti, Costa,Michelle Nazaré Xavier da, Monteiro,Francisco Antonio
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Escola Superior de Agricultura "Luiz de Queiroz" 2004
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-90162004000600011
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spelling oai:scielo:S0103-901620040006000112005-02-16Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supplyLavres Jr.,JoséFerragine,Maria Del CarmenGerdes,LucianaRaposo,Roberto Wagner CavalcantiCosta,Michelle Nazaré Xavier daMonteiro,Francisco Antonio Panicum maximum leaf area phyllochron leaves tillering Areas with Aruana grass (Panicum maximum Jacq.) in Brazilian pastures, especially those used by sheep, have expanded due to yield and morphological characteristics of this grass that are favorable to these animals. Nevertheless, the knowledge concerning yield attributes of this grass in relation to nitrogen fertilization is very limited. The objective of this research was to evaluate yield and physiological attributes in this forage grass when grown in nutrient solutions containing N rates. The experiment was carried out in a greenhouse with plastic pots containing ground quartz as substrate, during the Spring season. Six N rates in the solution (14, 112, 210, 294, 378, and 462 mg L-1), with 70% N-NO3- and 30% N-NH4+ were tested. Experimental units were set up in a completely randomized block design, with four replications. Plants were harvested at 35 days after the seedlings were transplanted to the pots and again at 28 days after the first harvest. After the second harvest, the roots were taken from the substrate. In both growing periods, dry matter yield for plant tops and roots, leaf area, number of expanded green leaves, number of tillers, leaf appearance rate, and phyllochron were significantly affected by the N rates, and the data were adjusted to a second-order model. Aruana grass required high rates of N to show maximum response in those variables.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessEscola Superior de Agricultura "Luiz de Queiroz"Scientia Agricola v.61 n.6 20042004-12-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-90162004000600011en10.1590/S0103-90162004000600011
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Lavres Jr.,José
Ferragine,Maria Del Carmen
Gerdes,Luciana
Raposo,Roberto Wagner Cavalcanti
Costa,Michelle Nazaré Xavier da
Monteiro,Francisco Antonio
spellingShingle Lavres Jr.,José
Ferragine,Maria Del Carmen
Gerdes,Luciana
Raposo,Roberto Wagner Cavalcanti
Costa,Michelle Nazaré Xavier da
Monteiro,Francisco Antonio
Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply
author_facet Lavres Jr.,José
Ferragine,Maria Del Carmen
Gerdes,Luciana
Raposo,Roberto Wagner Cavalcanti
Costa,Michelle Nazaré Xavier da
Monteiro,Francisco Antonio
author_sort Lavres Jr.,José
title Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply
title_short Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply
title_full Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply
title_fullStr Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply
title_full_unstemmed Yield components and morphogenesis of Aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply
title_sort yield components and morphogenesis of aruana grass in response to nitrogen supply
description Areas with Aruana grass (Panicum maximum Jacq.) in Brazilian pastures, especially those used by sheep, have expanded due to yield and morphological characteristics of this grass that are favorable to these animals. Nevertheless, the knowledge concerning yield attributes of this grass in relation to nitrogen fertilization is very limited. The objective of this research was to evaluate yield and physiological attributes in this forage grass when grown in nutrient solutions containing N rates. The experiment was carried out in a greenhouse with plastic pots containing ground quartz as substrate, during the Spring season. Six N rates in the solution (14, 112, 210, 294, 378, and 462 mg L-1), with 70% N-NO3- and 30% N-NH4+ were tested. Experimental units were set up in a completely randomized block design, with four replications. Plants were harvested at 35 days after the seedlings were transplanted to the pots and again at 28 days after the first harvest. After the second harvest, the roots were taken from the substrate. In both growing periods, dry matter yield for plant tops and roots, leaf area, number of expanded green leaves, number of tillers, leaf appearance rate, and phyllochron were significantly affected by the N rates, and the data were adjusted to a second-order model. Aruana grass required high rates of N to show maximum response in those variables.
publisher Escola Superior de Agricultura "Luiz de Queiroz"
publishDate 2004
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-90162004000600011
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