SEED YIELD IN CARAWAY (CARUM-CARVI) .2. ROLE OF ASSIMILATE AVAILABILITY

Citation
Hj. Bouwmeester et al., SEED YIELD IN CARAWAY (CARUM-CARVI) .2. ROLE OF ASSIMILATE AVAILABILITY, Journal of Agricultural Science, 124, 1995, pp. 245-251
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture,"Agriculture Dairy & AnumalScience
ISSN journal
00218596
Volume
124
Year of publication
1995
Part
2
Pages
245 - 251
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8596(1995)124:<245:SYIC(.>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Assimilate availability may determine seed yield of caraway during thr ee periods: (i) before flowering it may determine dry matter allocatio n to flowers and thereby the number of ovaries; (ii) during flowering it may determine seed set; and (iii) after flowering it may determine seed filling. From 1990 to 1992 in the vicinity of Wageningen, field e xperiments were performed in which growth, assimilate storage and part itioning, and the effects of shading during various growth stages on s eed set and filling, were studied to determine the importance of these three phases. Dry matter production before flowering was correlated w ith dry mass of flowers, but there was no relationship between the dry mass of flowers and seed yield. Assimilate availability after floweri ng only slightly affected seed yield, but during flowering it had a st rong effect. Shading 50% (during c. 3 weeks of flowering only) reduced yield by 30% whereas 50% shading (after flowering for > 1 month) redu ced yield by only 6%. In addition, the main flowering period of bienni al caraway over a number of years was estimated and the daily amount o f photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) for that period calculated . There was a dose linear relationship between light intensity during flowering and yield. The possibilities for yield improvement using the se results are discussed.