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The aim of the research was evaluation of the effect of agrotechnical level on the brewing quality of winter barley grain with the use of 35-2 (IV) fractional design. Quality parameters of malting barley malt and grain were subjected to analysis. The analysis of experimental features was based on the linear model. In case of rejecting the null hypothesis (H0), multiple comparison test SNK was applied with the significance level P = 0.05. It was proved that quality parameters of winter barley malt are typical cultivar traits, which to a slight degree may be modified with the use of a different level of agricultural techniques. The only agrotechnical factor which significantly affected quality parameters of malt obtained from winter barley grain was nitrogen fertilization. Together with the increase of nitrogen fertilization level, extractivity and Kolbach index significantly deteriorated, while value of diastatic power improved.
Tribolium confusum is one of the most frequently occurring insects and it is considered very harmful because it destroys stored products. It is especially destructive to cereal grains and foodstuffs although it also damages other products. In the present studies, the susceptibility of 4 cereal species (spring wheat, winter wheat, millet, maize) to the confused flour beetle feedings was established based on selected parameters (number of 2nd generation beetles, product weight loss, and amount of powder remaining after a feeding). The grains of maize appeared to be the best substrate for the confused flour beetle’s development. On maize, the number of progeny, the weight loss of grain, and the amount of powder remaining were the highest. Millet grains, in contrast, were the worst environment for the development of T. confusum. It is very likely that the differences in cereal susceptibility were due to the different structure of grains (e.g., the size of the embryo, and the hardness of the grain coat).
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The aim of the research was determination of the relationship between agrotechnical factors and the yield of winter malting barley cv. Corbie. Grain yield and its components were discussed. The source of results was field experiment carried out at the Experimental Station „Bałcyny Sp. z o.o.” near Ostróda, under favourable weather conditions for winter barley in the years 2006-2008. 35-2(IV) fractional design was applied in two replications with 27 combinations in each one, in which at the same time 5 factors were tested (A, B, C, D, E) on three levels (0, 1, 2). Very high, though diversified in years, yield of winter barley cv Corbie was confirmed on the soil of the good wheat complex. During studies, the plants of this cultivar overwintered well, to a slight degree they lodged, and their infection with fungal diseases was low. Relationship between the yield and technological level was smaller than assumed in the working hypothesis. The highest grain yield was obtained from barley which was sown earliest (September 9-11th), at a rate of 450 grains·m-2 with spring N fertilization at a rate of 60 kg N·ha-1. These were treatments protected with a dressing and 2 fungicide treatments at the time of growing and treated with regulator Retar 480 SL.
Changes in soil penetration resistance and yields of winter rapeseed, winter wheat and spring barley cultivated in the 3-year rotation system under the influence of soil compaction and four tillage methods were evaluated in a field experiment conducted in 2009-2012. During the stage of full emergence of winter rapeseed, at the depth of 0-10 and 10-20 cm (lots without compaction) after U-2 cultivation (subsoiler 40 cm, disk cultivator, harrowing, cultivating, sowing ploughing 20 cm), the resistance of the soil decreased significantly as compared to the plough cultivation (control lot). At the level of 20-30 cm, after conventional cultivation, significantly lower compaction of the soil was found compared to the other cultivation variants. On the compacted lots, the opposite situation was found. During the full blossom stage, in the lots without compaction, tillage increased the soil compaction significantly within the studied soil levels, compared to the reduced tillage variants. On the other hand, at the depth of 20-30 cm (lots with compaction), regardless of the reduced tillage variant, significantly higher compaction of the soil, as compared to the plough cultivation, was recorded. After rapeseed harvest, at the depth of 10 cm (lots without compaction), after U-2 cultivation, almost 2-fold increase in the value of the analysed characteristic was recorded as compared to the plough cultivation. During the wheat stem elongation stage, on the lots without and with compaction, the highest soil compaction was found at the depth of 20-30 cm after U-3 cultivation. In the lots without compacting, during the heading, the application of the ripper (U-2 cultivation) significantly decreased the compaction of soil down to 10 cm. In the 20-30 cm layer (lots with compaction), soil resistance increased, assuming the highest values after subsoiler and single ploughing. After the harvest of crops from the lots without compaction, an increase of soil compaction, as compared to the plough cultivation, was recorded after U-2 cultivation at the depth of up to 10 cm and in the 10-20 cm layer after the application of subsoiler and single ploughing. The degree of compaction and the method of soil cultivation diversified significantly the yields of the analysed cereal. Following spring barley harvest, in the lots without compaction, significantly higher soil resistance was found after applying full plough cultivation compared to the lots with compaction (depth 10-20 cm). Similar outcomes were obtained at the levels of 0-10 and 10-20 cm after U-2 cultivation (skimming, cultivator, harrow + pre-winter tillage to 25 cm) and at the depth of 20-30 cm after the application of the cultivator and performance of pre-winter tillage to the depth of 25 cm (U-3 cultivation). On the compacted lots, as compared to the lots that were not compacted, a significantly higher yield of winter rapeseed was obtained following U-3 cultivation. Postharvest cultivation using the subsoiler and pre-sowing cultivation by single ploughing decreased the winter wheat yield the most as compared to the traditional cultivation. The yield of grain from lots with soil compaction, compared to lots without compaction, was significantly higher. In the case of lots with compaction, the application of skimming, cultivator treatment and harrowing of the field after harvest of the forecrop and performance of pre-winter tillage to the depth of 25 cm (U-2 cultivation) increased spring barley yield significantly compared to the conventional cultivation.
Environmentally-friendly solutions are increasingly often applied in crop cultivation technologies. These include, among others, the return of old crops (e.g., spelt wheat) and crop rotation. Ensuring a proper forecrop is essential, especially in the cultivation of winter wheat, which is susceptible to infestation by weeds. However, there is only sparse information on infestation by weeds in the cultivation of winter spelt. In this study, it was assumed that this crop is invaded by weeds to a lesser extent than wheat, especially after unfavorable forecrops. The study was based on a field experiment conducted in the east part of Poland. The aim was to compare the weed infestation of common wheat and spelt wheat grown after peas, oilseed rape, and after itself. Analyses of weed infestation were conducted in 2014–2016. The weed species composition and population size were determined as well as their dry weight. The following indices were calculated: index of species richness, Simpson’s domination index, Shannon–Wiener index of species diversity, and Pielou’s index of evenness. The weed infestation of spelt wheat was higher than that of common wheat during the tillering stage. It was similar in both species during the heading stage. The lowest weed infestation in both cereals was observed on a field where peas had grown. Growing after oilseed rape and after themselves contributed to an increase in weed infestation. Biomass of weeds in a field of spelt was similar after all forecrops, unlike that in wheat, where more biomass was observed after oilseed rape and wheat. A greater share of Apera spica-venti and Viola arvensis was observed in common wheat and spelt grown after oilseed rape and after themselves. Weed communities in spelt were more diverse than in wheat. The forecrops did not differentiate the species diversity in either crop.
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