Assessing The Economic Impacts Of Integrated Nutrient Management Practices On Barley Cultivation

Authors

  • Laxminarayan Research Scholar, University of Technology, Jaipur Author
  • Dr. Shyam Sunder Yadav Professor and Supervisor, University of Technology, Jaipur Author

Keywords:

Barley, Nutrient Management, Hordeum Vulgare, Nutrient Management

Abstract

In order to address the issues that the malting barley business often faces with regard to volume and quality in order to satisfy demand, the research set out to evaluate the effects of integrated nutrient management strategies on the financial aspects of barley production. The Maharana Pratap University of Agriculture and Technology's study Farm in Udaipur, Rajasthan, was the site of the 2022–2023 rabi season study. Classified as a sandy loam, the experimental soil had a pH that was somewhat alkaline, low amounts of organic carbon and nitrogen, and medium availability of potassium and phosphorus. The trial was done in a Randomized Block Plan and was reproduced multiple times. As per investigation, grain creation under treatment T10 delivered observably more prominent gross returns, net returns, and advantage cost proportions. Medicines T9 (RDN) and T10 showed comparable financial execution to treatment T8 (75% RDN + Biomix + Vermicompost @ 5 t ha^-1) showing no massive contrasts in reap and fascination lists across various mixes of nitrogen manure, biomix, and vermicompost.

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Published

2024-11-29 — Updated on 2024-12-14

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How to Cite

Assessing The Economic Impacts Of Integrated Nutrient Management Practices On Barley Cultivation. (2024). International Journal of Multidisciplinary Engineering In Current Research, 9(11), 35-43. https://ijmec.com/index.php/multidisciplinary/article/view/196 (Original work published 2024)