Abstract:
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Contents: Report -- Canola upsets the nutrition of the next cereal crop / Bill Bowden, Garren Knell, Cherie Rowles, Simon Bedbrook, Chris Gazey, Mike Bolland, Ross Brennan, Lynne Abbott, Zed Rengel and Wayne Pluske -- Is nutrition the answer to wheat after canola problems? / Ross Brennan, Bill Bowden, Mike Bolland, Zed Rengel and David Isbister -- Burn stubble windrows : to diagnose soil fertility problems / Bill Bowden, Chris Gazey and Ross Brennan -- Nutrients in canola - maintaining the balance in your
otation / Ross Brennan -- Research report : WA : windrow effects highlight the need for potassium fertilisation.
(En)
Most canola crops in Western Australia are swathed to harvest grain. After harvesting grain, the remaining canola plant material is dropped back onto the ground behind the harvester to form 'header rows' at about the same position where the swathed material was harvested. When wheat or barley are grown after swathed canola crops, frequently 'waves' appear in the crops. Growth of cereal plants is relatively good where the header row existed, but is much poorer between the rows from which the canola crop w
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