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Effects of shading and seed tuber spacing on initiation and number of tubers in potato crops (Solanum tuberosum)
Twelve field experiments, carried out over 7 years, examined effects of shading and seed tuber spacing on plant growth, initiation and retention of tubers in four cultivars: Estima, Maris Piper, Maris Peer and Record. Ten of the experiments were carried out at Cambridge and two near Valencia, Spain....
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Published in: | The Journal of agricultural science 1998-06, Vol.130 (4), p.431-449 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Twelve field experiments, carried out over 7 years, examined
effects of shading and seed tuber spacing
on plant growth, initiation and retention of tubers in four
cultivars: Estima, Maris Piper, Maris Peer
and Record. Ten of the experiments were carried out at Cambridge and two
near Valencia, Spain.
Other treatments included in some experiments were floating polythene mulch
and planting date. Shading by up to 75% did not affect the timing of onset or cessation
of tuber initiation in Estima
but shading by 50% or more delayed the completion of tuber initiation
in Maris Piper compared with
less severe shading. Except for intensely shaded treatments (50% or more),
the majority of tubers
were initiated in a very short period (4–7 days). Shading by
37% or more during the period of tuber
initiation and increasing planting density, decreased number of
tubers per stem initiated in all
experiments, but number of tubers was not affected by shading at other
stages of growth. At
Cambridge, effects of shading on number of tubers >10 mm
retained later in growth from normal
planting dates (March to early May) were similar to effects on
number of tubers initiated, but effects
were much reduced or absent following later plantings at Cambridge and
in both experiments in
Valencia. The decreased effects of shading on number of tubers >10 mm
at late plantings at
Cambridge were associated with the initiation of fewer tubers
at these plantings. Effects of shading,
planting density and planting date on number of tubers were a consequence
of changes in the
frequency of occurrence and tuberization of different stolon
types. Increasing shading and planting
density and delaying planting reduced the number of lateral and
branch stolons and the frequency
of their tuberization but there were no effects on number of
primary stolons or their tuberization.
Consequently, at Cambridge a similar number of tubers was
borne on primary stolons in shaded and
unshaded crops. In Valencia a greater proportion of initiated
tubers was retained at final harvest from
shaded treatments than at Cambridge, which accounts for the absence of
effects of shading on
number of tubers >10 mm. The greater retention of tubers
late in growth in Spain may have been
associated with the higher peak growth rates achieved in higher
radiation fluxes than at Cambridge. Linear regressions of the data for normal planting dates at
Cambridge and from Valencia indicated
that the number of tubers >10 mm late in growth was depende |
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ISSN: | 0021-8596 1469-5146 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0021859698005541 |