E3S Web of Conferences (Jan 2023)

Effect of using repeated and siderate crops on soil fertility, yield of cotton varieties, and technological quality indicators of cotton fiber in short rotation cropping systems

  • Iminov Abduvali,
  • Ulugov Chorshanbi,
  • Kholturaev Sharofiddin,
  • Togayeva Sarvinoz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202338903034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 389
p. 03034

Abstract

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In the 1:1 (cotton:grain) system of short-rotation, soybean, bean, mung bean crops were harvested as a repeat crop after winter wheat. Their stem crop and mixed siderate crops (perco, oats, green peas) were planted in the second half of August, and the blue mass crop grown in October-November was harvested for livestock. The lower 15-20 cm part of the stem was plowed under the plow as a blue manure, at the end of one rotation, the amount of organic carbon in the soil increased by 0.041-0.073%, and the total nitrogen content by 0.012-0.016% compared to the initial values. The highest rate of dry mass accumulation of cotton was observed when using short-row rotation 1:1, winter wheat + mixed siderate crops (perco, oat, green pea):cotton system. The dry mass of the leaves of the Navroz variety of cotton was 22.6 g, the dry mass of the stem was 33.4 g, the dry mass of the bolls was 18.5 g, and the dry mass of the cotton was 48.0 g. The total dry mass of 1 plant was equal to 122.5 g. In the 1:1 (cotton:grain) system of short-rotation, when cotton was grown as a repeat crop after legume-cereal (soybean, mung bean) and mixed siderate (perco, oat, green pea) crops, it provided a higher and better quality cotton yield. Cotton yield was 3.2-5.8 tons/ha, fiber output was 1.0-1.5 percent, and 1000 seed mass was 9.0-11.0 g/ha. Besides, the length of the fiber was found to be higher by 1.4-2.0 mm.