Effect of integrated management on Fusarium wilt progression and grain yield of chickpea in Syria
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Seid Ahmed Kemal, Mathew Abang, Muhammad Imtiaz, Asaad Nader. (17/3/2015). Effect of integrated management on Fusarium wilt progression and grain yield of chickpea in Syria. Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science, 61 (11), pp. 1551-1560.
Abstract
Fusarium wilt, caused by Fusarium oxysporum Schlechtend.: f. sp. ciceris (Padwick)
Matuo & K. Sato, is a major production problem in many countries. A study was
conducted to develop an integrated management of Fusarium wilt of chickpea using
genotypes, sowing dates (January as early sowing and March/April as spring sowing)
and fungicide seed treatments under natural infested plots in research plots and farmers’
fields 2007–2009 cropping seasons. In most cases, sowing date and fungicides did
not affect disease parameters and seed yield. Chickpea genotypes showed significant
differences in seed yield but different responses for disease parameters. Averaged over
locations and seasons, the rate of disease development was higher in early (0.035 units
day−1) than spring (0.023 units day−1) sowing. Chickpea genotypes showed different
responses in affecting rate of disease development and cumulative wilt incidence in
early and late sowing periods. Higher mean seed yield (1.3 t ha−1) was recorded in
early than late sowing (1.0 t ha−1) of chickpea. The average seed yield reduction due to
spring sowing ranged from 9% to 60% and highest yield losses were observed in FLIP-
97–706 and Ghab-3. This study showed that integrating January sowing with genotypes
having good levels of resistance for Fusarium wilt and Ascochyta blight helps
farmers to narrow chickpea yield gaps in Syria.
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Kemal, Seid Ahmed https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1791-9369