Understanding and managing the late time of ratooning effect on cane yield

Lawes, R.A., Lawn, R.J., Wegener, M.K., and Basford, K.E. (2004) Understanding and managing the late time of ratooning effect on cane yield. Proceedings of the Australian Society of Sugar Cane Technologists, 24 . - .

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Abstract

Each year growers are faced with the decision of when to harvest individual blocks of sugarcane throughout the harvest season. This decision influences the yield of the current crop and can affect the yield in the following season. Growers must therefore decide which blocks to harvest early and which to harvest later in the harvest season. Usually, the latest harvested cane is the lowest yielding the following year (the ‘late harvest’ effect). Block productivity data from Tully were used to determine the effects of harvest timing on cane yield of the current and subsequent crop. The results are tabulated to provide a ready reference to these time of harvest effects on the current and future crop in either a single year or over the full crop cycle for the Tully district.

ID Code:14988
Item Type:Article (Refereed Research - C1)
Related URLs:
FoR Codes:07 AGRICULTURAL AND VETERINARY SCIENCES > 0703 Crop and Pasture Production > 070302 Agronomy @ 100%
SEO Codes:82 PLANT PRODUCTION AND PLANT PRIMARY PRODUCTS > 8203 Industrial Crops > 820304 Sugar @ 100%
Funders:CRC for Sustainable Sugar Production
Deposited On:25 Nov 2010 12:05
Last Modified:12 Feb 2011 19:09
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