Field Crops Research, 21 (1989) 49-58 49
Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam -- Printed in The Netherlands
Effect of Cutting Height on the Yield and Straw
Quality of Lentil and on a Succeeding Wheat Crop
S.N. SILIM, M.C. SAXENA and W. ERSKINE
International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), P.O. Box 5466,
Aleppo (Syria)
(Accepted 25 October 1988)
ABSTRACT
Silim, S.N., Saxena, M.C. and Erskine, W., 1989. Effect of cutting height on the yield and straw
quality of lentil and on a succeeding wheat crop. Field Crops Res., 21: 49-58.
Lentil (Lens culinaris Med.) seeds are an important source of protein in the human diet, while
the straw is widely used as animal feed in the Mediterranean region and West Asia, but production
is declining due to the high cost of hand-harvesting. Investigations were conducted during 1984-
1985 and 1985-1986 at Tel Hadya, North Syria, to assess the yield losses in seed and straw when
lentil cultivars of differing plant type were harvested with a double-knife harvester at various
heights above ground-level, compared with traditional hand-pulling. Averaged over both seasons,
respective losses were 10.1%, 14.8% and 19.5% in seed yield and 16.1%, 39.9% and 45.1% in straw
yield, for cutting lentil at ground-leveland at 5 and 10 cm above ground, compared to hand-pulling.
Digestibility of straw, and its protein percentage, increased with height of cut. Percentage losses
in seed and straw yields were least in the tall upright cultivar ILL 8, and greatest in the spreading-
type ILL 4400.
The residual effect of the different heights of cut and cultivars of lentil on the succeeding wheat
crop, given 0 and 60 kg N ha- 1, was investigated during the 1986-1987 season. Method of harvest
of lentil in 1985-1986 did not significantly influence the total biological and seed yields of a suc-
ceeding wheat crop in 1986-1987. Nitrogen applied at 60 kg ha-1 on the wheat crop in 1986-1987
tended to increase total biological yield, but significantly decreased harvest index and seed yield.
INTRODUCTION
Although lentil (Lens culinaris Med. ) accounts for only 3 % of the total world
area sown to the pulses, in some countries, particularly in West Asia, it as-
sumes greater importance. For example, 74% of the total pulse area in Jordan,
51% in Syria, 28% in Turkey, 24% in Iran and 18% in Lebanon is under lentil
(Nygaard and Hawtin, 1981 ). Lentil is thus an important component of the
rainfed farming systems in the dry areas of West Asia and North Africa, where
its seeds are a valuable source of quality protein in the human diet and its straw
is a highly valued animal feed. In years when rainfall is insufficient to allow
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