Journal article

Potential of microwave soil heating for weed management and yield improvement in rice cropping

Muhammad Jamal Khan, Graham Brodie, Dorin Gupta

CROP & PASTURE SCIENCE | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2019

Abstract

Herbicide-resistant weeds have prompted the development of non-chemical weed-control techniques for sustainable crop production. We examined the potential of pre-emergence microwave (MW) soil treatment to suppress weeds and enhance grain yield in rice (Oryza sativa L.) cropping in two agro-ecological zones of Australia. An experimental MW weed killer, which has four, independently controlled, 2-kW MW generators operating at 2.45 GHz, was used to treat the soil before cropping under field conditions. A once-off MW soil treatment (duration 60 s) and an untreated control were assigned in a randomised complete block design with five replicates at two study locations: Dookie (Victoria) and Jerild..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Agrifutures Australia


Funding Acknowledgements

This research work was executed with support of Agrifutures Australia [Project: PRJ-008765]. We thank Rice Research Australia Pty Ltd (RRAPL)-SunRice for the trial site at Old Coree, Jerilderie, NSW, and technical support for rice crop management. We also thank to Humayun Kabir, PhD Candidate at the Dookie Campus - the University of Melbourne, for his help during trial harvesting and grain processing.