See more from this Division:
U.S. Canola Association Research Conference
See more from this Session:
Canola Agronomy – Breeding / Biotech / Spring & Winter
Wednesday, November 3, 2010: 2:30 PM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 201A, Second Floor
Edwin Lentz, Ohio State University, Tiffin, OH and Shaun Casteel, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
Winter canola is a potential new crop for Ohio
and Indiana. Seed
cost, especially new hybrid varieties, may affect its adoption. It has been
hypothesized that seeding rates may be lowered without greatly affecting
yields. To test this hypothesis, two varieties were established with three
seeding rates (2.2, 4.5, and 6.7 kg ha-1) at two Ohio
and two Indiana
sites in the fall of 2008 and 2009. Experimental design was a two-factored
randomized block replicated four or six times. There was no significant
interaction between variety and seeding rate for either year so only main
effects are reported. In 2009, yields were similar among the three seeding
rates at the one surviving site in Indiana.
Yields at the Ohio
sites were similar between the 4.5 and 6.7 kg per ha rates; however, yields
were reduced at the 2.2 kg per ha seeding rate. In 2010, yields were similar
among the three seeding rates at the two Ohio
sites and one Indiana
site. At the other Indiana
site, the 6.7 kg ha-1 treatment yielded less than the two lower
seeding rates (yields were similar for the two lower rates). Rates at 4.5 kg ha-1 should be an
adequate seeding rate for winter canola in Ohio
and Indiana. Depending
on the year, yield reductions may occur at lower seeding rates.