Author:
French R. J.,French R. J.,Sweetingham M. W.,Sweetingham M. W.,Shea G. G.,Shea G. G.
Abstract
Almost the entire lupin industry of Western Australia is based on the single
species Lupinus angustifolius L. (narrow-leafed lupin),
which is very well adapted to coarse-textured, mildly acid soils. However,
L. angustifolius is not well suited to the strongly acid
sand plain soils along the low rainfall fringe of Western Australia’s
agricultural areas, and alternative grain legume species may be preferable.
These soils, known locally as wodjil soils, have very low nutrient contents,
often high levels of extractable Al in the subsoil, and are common in areas
where severe brown spot and root rot disease is caused
byPleiochaeta setosa. Yellow lupin,
Lupinus luteus L., may be a better species on these
soils.
This paper describes a series of trials comparing the grain yields of
narrow-leafed lupin and yellow lupin on a range of soils in the agricultural
areas of Western Australia. These trials were sown on a range of dates and in
a range of rotational backgrounds between 1995 and 1998. With current
cultivars, narrow-leafed lupin clearly has higher yield potential than yellow
lupin when soil-extractable [Al] at a depth of 15–25 cm
(measured in a 1 :5 extract of soil in 0.01 M CaCl2) is
<10 mg/kg. When extractable [Al] at this depth is greater,
yellow lupin can produce greater yields than narrow-leafed lupin, depending on
other environmental characteristics, especially when extractable
[Al] exceeds 28 mg/kg, but its yield advantage is often small.
Yellow lupin is less sensitive to delayed sowing than narrow-leafed lupin, and
more tolerant of brown spot, but narrow-leafed lupin is more responsive to
good seasonal conditions and less sensitive to frost.
We conclude that yellow lupin has a place in Western Australian farming
systems on soils with >10 mg/kg extractable [Al] where these
soils are in close lupin rotations, in areas where brown spot is severe, or in
low rainfall areas where narrow-leafed lupin yield potential does not often
exceed 1 t/ha on these soils. However, yellow lupin has had relatively
little breeding effort in Australia and its place will remain precarious until
better adapted, higher yielding cultivars become available.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
25 articles.
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