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    Not AvailableA field experiment was conducted during kharif season of 2016 at Central Rainfed Upland Rice Research Station (CRURRS), Hazaribagh, Jharkhand to evaluate the effect of planting methods, irrigation scheduling and soil adjuvant on growth, productivity and nutrient content of aerobic rice. The experiment was laid-out in a split-plot design keeping 8-combinations of 4-irrigation schedules, viz., I1 : Irrigation at 0.9 IW/CPE ratio, I2 : irrigation at 1.2 IW/CPE ratio, I3 : Irrigation at 1.5 IW/CPE ratio and I4 : Un-irrigated (rainfed) and 2-soil adjuvants (A1: soil adjuvant applied and A2: No-soil adjuvant) in the main-plots and 2-planting methods P1 : Conventional dry seeding at 20 cm row spacing and P2 : Spot-sowing (dibbling of 4-seeds per hill at 20 × 15 cm) in the sub-plots, thus there were a total of 16 treatment combinations. Scheduling irrigation at 1.5 IW/ CPE ratio recorded highest plant height (95.4 cm), DMA (1053 g m–2) and LAI (3.44); similarly grain yield increased by 37.3% over rainfed crop, 23% over crop irrigated at 0.9 IW/CPE ratio and 13.5% over 1.2IW/CPE ratio. Effect of irrigation scheduling was found non-significant on nutrient concentration except P concentration in grain and straw. Crop irrigated at IW/CPE ratio 1.5 exhibited significantly higher P-concentration in grain and straw, over irrigation at IW/CPE ratio 0.9 and rainfed crop. Application of soil adjuvant (APSA 80TM) didn't bring significant changes in any of the studied parameters. Between the two planting methods, spot-sowing resulted in higher growth and improved grain yield by about 7% over conventional method of sowing, however, effect on nutrient content remained non-significant.Not Availabl
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