T. Adisarwanto et R. Knight, EFFECT OF SOWING DATE AND PLANT-DENSITY ON YIELD AND YIELD COMPONENTSIN THE FABA BEAN, Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 48(8), 1997, pp. 1161-1168
Faba bean cv. Fiord was sown at 3-week intervals between 24 April and
26 June at 6 densities varying from 20 to 56 plants/m(2). Days to emer
gence, flowering, pod set, and maturity were determined. At harvest: t
he biomass, yield, pod number, seeds per pod, and weight per seed were
evaluated per unit area and the distribution of the yield components
was evaluated for each node of the main stem. Later sowing had little
effect on the number of days to the appearance of the first pod but it
progressively reduced the duration of the pod development period from
98 to 60 days. The biomass at maturity of the plants sown on 24 April
was constant across all densities, at about 13.5 t/ha. Yield, however
, decreased linearly with density from 6.7 to 5.2 t/ha. Harvest index,
therefore: also fell with density. With later sowing, biomass and yie
ld increased with density. The increase in yield was not as great; so
again harvest index fell with density. Later sowing resulted in much l
ower yields and even at the highest density only reached 5.2 t/ha. Var
iation in yield was largely determined by variation in the number of p
ods per unit area. Seeds per pod was constant across the treatments bu
t weight per seed decreased if sowing was delayed beyond 10 June. With
later sowing, the number of pod-bearing nodes on the main stems decli
ned from 27 to 15. Early-sown plants at high density had fewer pods pe
r node at the lower nodes and more pods per node at the higher nodes t
han plants at low density. This interaction was not evident at the sec
ond sowing and the number of pods at each node was unaffected by densi
ty. For the sowings in June, all nodes of the low density plants bore
more pods. The number of seeds per pod was smaller at the lowest and h
ighest nodes, but as there were so few pods at these nodes, this did n
ot affect the mean number of seeds per pod when evaluated for all pods
on a plant. Weight per seed was more uniform for the nodes of the ear
ly-sown plants than for those of the plants sown later, in which there
was a marked decrease in weight per seed at the upper nodes.