MART-AZR Project Research Report 63: Germplasm Evaluation in Arid Highlands of Balochistan: Annual Report of the AZRI Germplasm Research Group 1989/90
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Sarfraz Ahmad, Asghar Ali, Roider Khan, Dyno (J. D. H. ) Keatinge. (28/3/1990). MART-AZR Project Research Report 63: Germplasm Evaluation in Arid Highlands of Balochistan: Annual Report of the AZRI Germplasm Research Group 1989/90. Punjab, Pakistan: Arid Zone Research Institute**.
Abstract
Almost 60% of the cultivated area of Balochistan
depends wholly on the winter and monsoon rains, which are
scanty and erratic. Crop yields are severely limited in
most years by water deficits, but low winter temperatures
can also be a severe constraint. The local crop varieties
have rather limited genetic potentials for yield, disease
resistance, and performance stability in this very variable,
harsh environment.
Improvements in yield and production can be attained by
practices that improve the moisture supply, such as water
harvesting, and by the selection and evaluation of improved
varieties better adapted to drought and cold stresses and
other environmental fluctuations. Due to the rapid increase
in population. and the decreasing opportunities for
intensive cropping in the limited irrigated areas, a well
planned research strategy is essential for the best
utilization of these rainfed areas. Aware of the vital
importance to Balochistan of rainfed agriculture, the Arid
Zone Research Institute (AZRI), based in Quetta has been
conducting wheat, barley, lentil, and forage legume
improvement program for the rainfed highlands of this area.
Progress made during the last five years of germplasm
evaluation work is summarised in Germplasm Evaluation
Highlights from 1984-89 (Ali et al., 1989). Details of the
progress made in the 1989/90 growing season is presented
here.