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  3. 136-143
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Research Journal of Seed Science

Year: 2012 | Volume: 5 | Issue: 4 | Page No.: 136-143

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Authors


W.B. Binang

Country: Nigeria

J.O. Shiyam

Country: Nigeria

J.D. Ntia

Country: Nigeria

Keywords


  • Seed priming method
  • seed germination
  • seedling emergence
  • NERICA rice
Research Article

Effect of Seed Priming Method on Agronomic Performance and Cost Effectiveness of Rainfed, Dry-seeded NERICA Rice

W.B. Binang, J.O. Shiyam and J.D. Ntia
Priming is a seed enhancement method that might improve seed performance under stress conditions such as drought or freshly harvested or aged seeds which might fail to germinate. A field experiment was conducted in randomized complete block design in 2009 and 2010 at the Research Farm of the University of Calabar, Calabar to evaluate the effect of a range of priming techniques on agronomic performance of New Rice for Africa (NERICA) and to quantify their benefits to farmers. Treatments were on-farm priming, hydropriming, Osmopriming, vitamin (Ascorbate) priming, hardening, osmohardening, as well as a non-primed control. Results showed that seed priming had significant effect on germination, seedling emergence, days to heading, duration to plant maturity, number of tillers, number of fertile panicles and grain yield (p = 0.05). However, plant height at maturity and weight of 1000 grains were not similarly affected. Seed germination and seedling emergence consistently occurred sooner in primed seeds compared to non-primed seeds but differences existed between priming methods. The time to 50% germination was least in hardened, hydro-primed, on-farm-primed and Ascorbate-primed seeds compared with other priming methods evaluated and percentage seedling emergence followed the same pattern. Primed seeds gave plants that matured earlier with hardened, hydro-primed and on-farm primed seeds not being statistically different. The grain yield from hardened, hydro-primed and on-farm primed seeds was statistically similar but higher than that of other priming methods studied. Based on net returns, the most cost-effective priming method for NERICA rice is hardening, followed closely by on-farm priming and hydropriming.
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How to cite this article

W.B. Binang, J.O. Shiyam and J.D. Ntia, 2012. Effect of Seed Priming Method on Agronomic Performance and Cost Effectiveness of Rainfed, Dry-seeded NERICA Rice. Research Journal of Seed Science, 5: 136-143.

URL: https://scialert.net/abstract/?doi=rjss.2012.136.143

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