Tm. Nleya et al., Evaluation of determinate and indeterminate pinto bean cultivars under an available soil moisture gradient, CAN J PLANT, 79(1), 1999, pp. 27-34
Determinate dry bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) cultivars are preferred under
irrigation in western Canada. Expansion of dry bean production into dryland
areas in western Canada requires re-evaluation of the best growth habit. T
he objective of this study was to compare determinate and indeterminate pin
to bean cultivars for seed yield and other agronomic traits under a soil mo
isture gradient. Six pinto bean cultivars, three determinate and three inde
terminate, were grown under an available soil moisture gradient in Saskatoo
n SK, Canada at one environment in 1993 and at two environments in 1994. An
increase in available soil moisture, induced by growing rows of pinto bean
plants at increasing distances from a spring-seeded winter barley (Hordeum
vulgare L.) strip, increased number of pods per plant, plant height, seed
weight, seed yield and seed nitrogen concentration for both determinate and
indeterminate cultivars of pinto bean. Indeterminate cultivars, however, w
ere taller and higher yielding than determinate cultivars at every level of
soil moisture under these dryland conditions.