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Showing 2 results for Mahlooji

M. Mahlooji, S.f. Mousavi, M. Karimi,
Volume 4, Issue 1 (spring 2000)
Abstract

A study was conducted to determine irrigation scheduling of pinto bean and to evaluate the effect of its planting date. A split-plot with complete randomized block design with four replications was used at Isfahan University of Technology Research Station in Shervedan-Falavarjan, The main plots were three irrigation regimes of T1 to T3 (irrigation after 50±3, 70±3 and 90±3 mm evaporation from class A pan, respectively) and the sub-plots were two planting dates of May 28 and June 28.

The results showed that delayed planting from May to June caused earlier flowering, physiological maturity and reduction of 29.6% in grain yield. Grain yield in T1 to T3 treatments were 3585.1, 3510.5 and 1925.8 kg/ha, respectively. The difference between grain yields of T1 and T2 with T3 treatments were significant at 1% probability level. Biological yields at May 28 and June 28 planting dates were 8257.1 and 5535 kg/ha, respectively, which were significantly different. There was no significant difference between biological yields of T1 and T2 treatments. Number of pods per square meter was the most important component of grain yield and 85% of grain yield difference was due to this part. Harvest index was affected by irrigation treatment and planting date. Mean harvest indices for T1 to T3 treatments were 45.5, 46.1 and 37%, respectively, and 42.8% and 44.9% for the two planting dates. Water use efficiencies for grain yield in T1 to T3 treatments were 0.557, 0.556 and 0.329 kg/m3, respectively. Generally, treatment T2 was shown to be the best irrigation regime.


Siavash Bardehji, Hamid Reza Eshghizadeh, Morteza Zahedi, Mehrdad Mahlooji, Mehdi Ghaysari,
Volume 30, Issue 1 (spring 2026)
Abstract

Climate change significantly affects the water use efficiency (WUE) and yield of field crops. This study evaluates the impacts of climate change on biological yield, grain yield, water consumption, and WUE of two barley genotypes, Goharan and Reyhan 03, under autumn and spring planting regimes using the CERES-Barley model within the Decision Support System for Agrotechnology Transfer (DSSAT) software. Data provided for model calibration and validation were sourced from the field experiments conducted at the Isfahan University of Technology research farm located in Najafabad, Iran. Meteorological data for the period of 2003 to 2016 were obtained from the Najafabad weather station, while future climate projections for 2020–2050 were generated using the MarkSim weather generator under the Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 8.5 scenario. Planting dates were analyzed within a ±35-day window relative to baseline dates of October 22 for autumn and March 3 for spring. The model demonstrated high accuracy in calibrating key traits, including days to anthesis, days to maturity, leaf area index, grain yield, and biological yield. Elevated temperatures associated with climate change reduced grain and biological yields across both planting seasons, with biological yield exhibiting a more pronounced decline, particularly under spring planting. During the 2040–2050 period, water consumption peaked at 387.5 mm for Goharan in autumn planting, while spring planting recorded a minimum of 239 mm for Reyhan 03. Delaying autumn planting by 20–25 days enhanced WUE, while planting earlier in the spring )10–20 days (improved WUE by exploiting cooler temperatures. Evapotranspiration increased by 399 mm in autumn but decreased by 267 mm in spring. The earlier-maturing Reyhan 03 genotype demonstrated smaller yield losses in spring planting due to climate change. The findings of this study suggest that programmed adjustments to planting dates may mitigate the adverse impacts of climate change on barley production, thereby enhancing sustainability.


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