Authors
G Singh, Scott C Chapman, PA Jackson, RJ Lawn
Publication date
2002
Journal
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
Volume
53
Issue
11
Pages
1183-1195
Publisher
CSIRO PUBLISHING
Description
Previous experiments in the Australian tropics have observed a 'slowdown' in biomass accumulation in mature sugarcane crops. By installing scaffolding to prevent lodging, we eliminated the growth 'slowdown' in 3 experiments to confirm that lodging and stalk death are part of the explanation. In both the wet and dry (irrigated) tropics, lodging of sugarcane significantly decreased both fresh cane yield and commercial cane sugar content (CCS). Prevention of lodging increased cane yield by 11–15%, CCS by 3–12%, and sugar yield by 15–35% at the final harvest in August–September. The rate of increase in CCS in lodged cane was reduced following lodging, although CCS had partially recovered by harvest. A possible component of the lodging effect is a slowdown in the growth due to the ageing of the crop. However, a younger crop (late crop treatment) grew no faster than the scaffolded treatment and so …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
G Singh, SC Chapman, PA Jackson, RJ Lawn - Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 2002