ABSTRACT
Integrated nutrient management (INM) is an environment friendly and ecologically adoptable approach of plant nutrition to sustain crop productivity and maintain soil fertility of fragile agricultural ecosystems. A three-year field experiment on saffron was conducted involving 12 fertilization regimes: control; urea (UN) = 100 kg·ha-1; poultry manure (PM) = 100 kg·ha-1; farmyard manure (FYM) = 100 kg·ha-1; PM50 + FYM50; UN75 + PM25; UN50 + PM50; UN25 + PM75; UN75 + FYM25; UN50 + FYM50; UN25 + FYM75; and UN50 + PM25+ FYM25. Results showed that PM alone and combined with 50% UN (UN50 + PM50) were effective compared to the controls in increasing the number of flowers (58%), flower dry weight (59%), stigma length (70%), dry weight of stigma (40%), number of daughter corms plant-1 (35%), and corm diameter (71%) of saffron over years. In addition, the same treatment combination increased corm weight (96%), corm yield (96%), and stigma yield (35%) over controls across the years. This treatment combination was followed by UN50 + PM25 + FYM25, while UN50 alone did not perform at par to the rest of the fertilization regimes. These results showed that UN50 + PM50 might be developed as potent strategy for boosting the growth and yield (stigma and daughter corms yield) of saffron in temperate climatic conditions.
Key words
synergistic fertilization; cash crop; poultry manure; farmyard manure; stigma yield; corm yield