Effect of Optimization of Nitrogen and Sulphur Nutrition on Productivity & Profitability of Late Sown Wheat

Ajay Maurya

Department of Agronomy, NDUA&T, Kumarganj, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh-224229, India.

Vishuddha Nand

Department of Agronomy, NDUA&T, Kumarganj, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh-224229, India.

Shiv Bahadur *

Department of Agronomy, C.S.S.S. (PG) College, Machhra, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh-250106, India.

Vipin Kumar

Department of Agricultural Chemistry C.S.S.S. (PG) College, Machhra, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh-250106, India.

Amar Singh

Department of Agricultural Chemistry C.S.S.S. (PG) College, Machhra, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh-250106, India.

Sompal

Department of Agronomy, CSAUA&T, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh-208002, India.

Bikrmaditya

Department of Agronomy, C.S.S.S. (PG) College, Machhra, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh-250106, India.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is a vital cereal crop that ensures food and nutritional security for a large portion of the global population. In India, yield stagnation in major wheat-growing regions highlights the need for improved nutrient management practices. Nitrogen (N) and sulphur (S) are essential nutrients that play a synergistic role in plant metabolism, contributing to the yield and quality. An experiment was conducted during the Rabi season of 2021–22 at the Agronomy Research Farm of NDUA&T, Kumarganj, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, to evaluate the effect of split doses of nitrogen and graded levels of sulphur on the productivity & economics of late-sown wheat. The trial was laid out in a split-plot design comprising two factors each at different levels. First factor of N management strategies (N₁: 100% RDN basal, N₂: 50% basal + 50% after first irrigation, N₃: 50% basal + 25% after first irrigation + 25% at flowering, N₄: 25% basal + 37.5% at first irrigation + 37.5% at second irrigation) and second factor of different sulphur levels (S₁: 0, S₂: 20, S₃: 40, S₄: 60 kg S ha⁻¹) were compared and replicated thrice. Results revealed that split application of nitrogen as N₄ (25% basal + 37.5% at first irrigation), combined with S₄ (60 kg ha⁻¹), significantly improved growth parameters (plant height, number of tillers, leaf area index, dry matter accumulation), yield attributes (number of spikes m⁻², spike length, grains spike⁻¹), and grain and straw yields compared to basal application alone. Test weight remained unaffected. Maximum grain yield and economic returns were achieved under N₄ with S₃, which also provided the highest benefit-cost ratio (1.90). The positive effects were attributed to sustained nutrient availability, enhanced photosynthetic activity, and efficient translocation of assimilates. Thus, adopting a split N strategy with 40–60 kg S ha⁻¹ can serve as an agronomically efficient and economically viable practice to enhance productivity and profitability of late-sown wheat under Indo-Gangetic Plains conditions.

Keywords: Harvest index, grain productivity, late-sown wheat, nitrogen management, sulphur nutrition, split application, yield attributes


How to Cite

Maurya, Ajay, Vishuddha Nand, Shiv Bahadur, Vipin Kumar, Amar Singh, Sompal, and Bikrmaditya. 2025. “Effect of Optimization of Nitrogen and Sulphur Nutrition on Productivity & Profitability of Late Sown Wheat”. Journal of Scientific Research and Reports 31 (10):772-81. https://doi.org/10.9734/jsrr/2025/v31i103622.

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