Author:
JAGGARD K. W.,DEWAR A. M.,PIDGEON J. D.
Abstract
Drought stress and virus yellows disease are two of the major problems
of sugarbeet crop production
in the UK. We have calculated the annual national drought losses from 1980
to 1995 by using long
term data sets for two sites (IACR-Broom's Barn, Suffolk and ADAS
Gleadthorpe, Nottinghamshire)
to relate yield loss to cumulative potential summer moisture deficit, and
combining these relationships
with regional meteorological records, soil type and crop distribution data.Experimentally measured relationships between yield losses and the timing
of virus yellows
infection were combined with annual survey data of the extent of the problem,
and calculated
infection dates from the UK aphid suction trap network, to calculate
actual national annual losses
to the disease. Potential losses in the absence of control measures were
then calculated by use of data from trials and surveys of pesticide use.The results showed a mean annual loss of production to drought stress
of
141000 t/year of sugar,
10·5% of production, with a loss to the industry of
£27·9 million. Losses in individual years varied
from zero to 2·5 times the mean figure. Actual losses to virus
yellows were much smaller, due to the
efficacy of treatments, averaging 24700 t/year of sugar (1·8%
of national yield, financial loss £5·5
million). Average potential virus yellows losses in the absence of control
measures were approximately double this.Control of virus yellows is a major, cost-effective contributor to
rising and consistent sugarbeet
production. Nationally, irrigation has made little impact on drought losses
and, due to constraints
in surface water supply, this situation appears likely to continue. Improved
drought stress tolerance
represents the largest single opportunity for yield and profitability
improvement of the sugarbeet crop
in the UK at present. Predicted climate change appears likely to increase
the severity of both drought
and disease stresses. Drought stress appears relatively less important
in other NW European
sugarbeet-growing areas.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
48 articles.
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