Spring wheat performance and water ude efficiency on permanent raised beds in arid northwest China
Publication Date:2014-10-29 12:37Click:
Content:Permanent raised beds have been proposed as a more productive and water-ef fi cient alternative to the conventional system of fl at, fl ood-irrigated bays for planting narrow-spaced crops in arid north-west China. Data from a fi eld experiment (2005 – 2007) conducted in the Hexi Corridor at Zhangye, Gansu Province, China, were used to compared the effects of traditional tillage (TT), zero tillage (ZT), and permanent raised beds (PRB) on crop growth, yield, and water use in a spring wheat monoculture. The results show that PRB signi fi cantly ( P < 0.05) increased soil water content to 0.30m depth by 7.2 – 10.7% and soil temperature to 0.05m depth by 0.2 – 0.9 8 C during the wheat-growing period relative to TT and ZT treatments. Bulk density in 0 – 0.10m soil layer under PRB was also 5.8% less than for fl at planting treatments. Mean wheat yields over 3 years on PRB plots were slightly greater and furrow irrigation in permanent beds was particularly effective in increasing irrigation water use ef fi ciency (~18%), compared with TT and ZT treatments. This increase in water use ef fi ciency is of considerable importance for these arid areas where irrigation water resources are scarce