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Good Management Guide - Canola

Canola was investigated as part of the Optimising Irrigated Grains research programme over three years. Growing canola under irrigation with the aim of producing 5t/ha has illustrated significant penalties in yields and margins from growing crops that are too thin. With higher yield potential under irrigation small differences in plant population have a “magnifying” effect in terms of yield. With plant populations below the optimum there are significant yield penalties, whilst in the same varieties’ populations that might be regarded as above the optimum have been either equal or higher yielding than the optimum. As a result, dropping to populations between 10-20 plants/m2 can produce a significant drop in productivity compared to plant populations that are above 40 plants/m2 when canola has been grown under irrigation.

Canola Agronomy Video

Top Agronomy Tips For Canola

Damian Jones

Good Management Guide –
Faba Beans

Faba beans were investigated as part of the Optimising Irrigated Grains research programme over three years. With higher yield potentials under irrigated cropping systems, the small drops in plant populations have a “magnifying” effect on grain yield loss (loss of approx. 1.5t/ha when dropping from 20 to 10 plants/m2). In contrast, moving from 20-30 plants/m2 increased yield by 0.5t/ha and whilst higher populations were rarely higher yielding, the risk of poorer yield performance was very slight in comparison to populations dropping below the optimum.

Farmer Perspective - Growing Irrigated Faba Beans

Ray Thornton, Yalca

Good Management Guide –
Faba Beans

Faba beans were investigated as part of the Optimising Irrigated Grains research programme over three years. With higher yield potentials under irrigated cropping systems, the small drops in plant populations have a “magnifying” effect on grain yield loss (loss of approx. 1.5t/ha when dropping from 20 to 10 plants/m2). In contrast, moving from 20-30 plants/m2 increased yield by 0.5t/ha and whilst higher populations were rarely higher yielding, the risk of poorer yield performance was very slight in comparison to populations dropping below the optimum.

Top Tips for High Yielding Faba Beans

Faba Bean Agronomy

Good Management Guide - Chickpeas

Chickpeas were investigated as part of the Optimising Irrigated Grains research programme over three years. Growing chickpeas under irrigation has demonstrated that there are yield penalties for crops that have reduced biomass and those subject to transient water logging. With early pod set determined by temperature (>15 degree C) and grain fill impacted by high temperatures later in spring, there is a window of opportunity for maximising yield by taking advantage of higher biomass promoted by higher seeding rates or earlier sowing

Growing Chickpeas

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