Author:
HIDE G. A.,WELHAM S. J.,READ P. J.,AINSLEY A. E.
Abstract
In 1989 and 1990, small, medium and large seed tubers, cv.
Désirée, were planted 38 cm apart in
experiments designed to measure the effects of different combinations of
neighbouring plants on the
yield and size of tubers from individual plants. Total yield, ware yield
(> 150 g), numbers of tubers
and numbers of stems increased as seed tuber size increased. Also, decreasing
the size of seed tubers
decreased the numbers of tubers in all sizes except those > 200 g. Competition
from the two
neighbouring plants on either side in the same row (first neighbours) increased
as the size of seed
tubers increased and with all seed sizes yields decreased. For example,
plants
from large seed benefited
from small seed planted as neighbours whereas, with plants from small seed,
yield was decreased with
neighbouring plants from large seed. Numbers of stems and tubers were not
affected by neighbouring
plants. Also yields were not affected by the two plants adjacent to the
first
neighbours (second
neighbours) or by the size of seed tubers planted in adjacent rows. Competition
from first neighbours
also affected tuber size distributions and, with small seed, increasing
the
competition decreased the
number of tubers > 150 g and increased numbers < 50 g. Medium and
small
seed planted as
neighbours of large seed increased numbers of tubers > 150 g. When yields
from plants produced by
seed of each size with similarly sized seed planted as first neighbours
(uniform populations) were
compared with mixed populations, yields were always greater from the mixed
populations of different
seed sizes planted alternately than from the means of uniform populations.
Therefore in the mixed populations, there were larger gains from the larger
seed than losses from the smaller seed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
4 articles.
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