Climate drives of growth, yield and microclimate variability in multistoried coconut plantation in Konkan region of Maharashtra, India

Authors

  • V. V. SHINDE Agronomist, ICAR-AICRP on Palms, Regional Coconut Research Station, Bhatye, Ratnagiri, India
  • S. L. GHAVALE Research Officer, Regional Coconut Research Station, Bhatye, Ratnagiri, India
  • H. P. MAHESWARAPPA Project coordinator, ICAR-AICRP on Palms, ICAR-CPCRI, Kasaragoad, Kerala, India
  • D. N. JAGTAP Assistant Professor, Department of Agronomy, Dr. B.S. Konkan Krishi Vidyapeeth, Dapoli, India
  • S. M. WANKHEDE Junior Entomologist, Regional Coconut Research Station, Bhatye, Ratnagiri, India
  • P. M. HALDANKAR Director of Research, Dr. B.S. Konkan Krishi Vidyapeeth, Dapoli, India
  • LINGARAJ HUGGI Research Associate, IFCWS, IISc, Bangalore, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54302/mausam.v75i2.3416

Keywords:

Coconut, Microclimate, Multistoried, Crop-weather relationship

Abstract

Long term experiments (2013-14 to 2018-19) were conducted in Regional Coconut Research Station, Bhatye, a representative location of major coconut growing region of Maharashtra (Konkan region) to study the impact of changing weather parameters on growth and yield of 32 years old coconut plants (dwarf x tall, i.e., COD x WCT). Regression based trend analysis of weather parameters was conducted to check the variability of weather parameters over experimentation years. There was a decrease in maximum temperature (r2=0.034) and increase in minimum temperature (r2=0.017) and rainfall (r2=0.393), indicating change in weather parameters. Correlation studies were carried out to understand the interaction between weather parameters and coconut growth and yield. Maximum temperature had a negative impact on growth (-0.02 and -0.58 for number of leaves and annual leaf production) but had a positive impact on yield (0.41, 0.64 and 0.63 for number of bunches, number of buttons and nut yield). Minimum temperature had significant negative effect on annual leaf production (-0.88) and had a positive effect on nut yield per plant (0.95). The effect of relative humidity (morning and evening) was non-significant. Rainfall had its influence on   the crop by negatively affecting the number of bunches (-0.10) and nut yield per plant (-0.48), a positively affecting number of buttons (0.08). Further, microclimate in the plantation was compared to an open field, which indicated lower maximum and minimum temperature (-3.4 and -3.1 %) and higher morning and evening relative humidity (1.6 and 1.9 %) in the coconut plantation as compared to the open field.

Downloads

Published

01-04-2024

How to Cite

[1]
V. V. SHINDE, “Climate drives of growth, yield and microclimate variability in multistoried coconut plantation in Konkan region of Maharashtra, India”, MAUSAM, vol. 75, no. 2, pp. 573–582, Apr. 2024.

Issue

Section

Shorter Contribution