4.2 Article

Early seeding improves the sustainability of canola and mustard production on the Canadian semiarid prairie

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 84, Issue 3, Pages 705-711

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.4141/P03-140

Keywords

dormant seeding; seeding date; Brassica oilseeds; yield; semiarid prairie

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Canola and mustard production is increasing in the semiarid prairie and seeding date affects the heat and water stress experienced by those crops. We conduced a 4-yr field study on the effect of fall (November with expected spring germination), early spring (late April) and late spring (late May) seeding on the growth of two cultivars representing two different canola species (B. napus L. 'Arrow' and B. rapa L. 'Sunbeam') and of two cultivars representing two different mustard species (B. juncea L. Coss. 'Cultass' and Sinapis alba L. 'Pennant'). Generally, all cultivars from the four different species responded similarly to seeding dates. Flowering during a period of less water stress increased grain yields so years with good moisture availability in spring (1999 and 2000) favored earlier seeding (fall and early spring) while a drier spring with moister summers (2001 and 2002) favored spring seeding. Fall seeding resulted in lower plant populations than spring seeding. Early spring seeding was most frequently the highest yielding and, when another seeding date was higher yielding, the yield difference from early spring seeding was relatively small (191 kg ha(-1)). These results, plus the typical Prairie weather pattern of increasing moisture stress from spring into summer, indicate that canola and mustard should be seeded as early in spring as practical. Cutlass was generally the highest yielding cultivar while Sunbeam was the lowest yielding.

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