the effect of treated municipal wastewater irrigation in non-agricultural soil on cotton plant
Authors
abstract
shortage of irrigation water is a crucial problem especially in arid and semiarid regions; therefore, application of wastewater in agriculture in such regions seems to be an indispensable solution. a field experiment was conducted in non-agricultural soil to investigate the effect of treated municipal wastewater (tmw) on the yield and fiber quality of cotton (gossypium hirsutum l.) crop. the treatments consisted of surface irrigation by different mixtures and as well, through different intervals of freshwater plus tmw. two additional treatments, namely, irrigation with freshwater and with tmw were considered as control. the experimental design was a randomized complete block one with eight treatments and three replications. the results indicated that cotton yield, number of bolls per m2, leaf area index (lai) and plant height were significantly higher when the crop irrigated with tmw rather than with freshwater. the crop yields in tmw vs. freshwater treatments were about 2,200 and 780 kg lint ha-1, respectively. there were no significant differences observed between interval and mixture treatments when the same percentages of freshwater and tmw applied. also there was no significant detrimental effect observed on the characteristics of cotton fiber quality when the crop irrigated with tmw.
similar resources
effect of irrigation with treated municipal wastewater on cotton plant characteristics
shortage of irrigation water, being a crucial problem in arid and semiarid regions, makes it necessary to use treated wastewater in agriculture. a field experiment was conducted to investigate the effect of treated municipal wastewater (tmw) on the yield and fiber quality of cotton (gossypium hirsutum l.) (mehr variety). treated municipal wastewater was supplied from shahrake ghods sewage treat...
full textEffect of irrigation with treated wastewater on lead and cadmium accumulations in soil and sweet pepper plant
Background and Objective: Limited water resources in arid and semi-arid regions are one of the major limiting factors in agricultural production. Thus, unconventional water resources, such as urban treated wastewater, may be used for irrigation. Application of wastewater to the soil may cause accumulation of heavy metals (HMs). Soil pollution causes uptake of these metals by plants and their en...
full texteffects of treated municipal wastewater and sea water irrigation on soil and plant characteristics
the increasing need for water in the arid areas of the world has resulted in the emergence of wastewater application for agriculture and landscape. using treated wastewater in agricultural irrigation can provide more adequate supply of high quality water for human consumption, but their heavy metal applications effect must be regulated to ensure no physiological problems for both the plant and ...
full textEffect of Treated Wastewater Irrigation on the Proliferation of Antibiotic Resistance in Agricultural Soils
In Israel with its semi-arid climate, water is a limited resource and yet, in the last two decades about 60% of all of Israel’s water resources are directed for agricultural use. This is feasible due to the capacity to recycle water. Treated wastewater (TWW) has become an important source of irrigation water in Israel and other parts of the world due to the pressures of increasing population an...
full textthe washback effect of discretepoint vs. integrative tests on the retention of content in knowledge tests
در این پایان نامه تاثیر دو نوع تست جزیی نگر و کلی نگر بر به یادسپاری محتوا ارزیابی شده که نتایج نشان دهندهکارایی تستهای کلی نگر بیشتر از سایر آزمونها است
15 صفحه اولMy Resources
Save resource for easier access later
Journal title:
journal of agricultural science and technologyPublisher: tarbiat modares university
ISSN 1680-7073
volume 14
issue 6 2012
Keywords
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023