Effect of Sowing Dates on Flowering and Maturity of Sesame

  • Shim Kang-Bo (Yeongnam Agricultural Research Institute, NICS, RDA) ;
  • Kang Churl-Whan (National Institute of Crop Science, RDA) ;
  • Kim Dong-Whi (National Institute of Crop Science, RDA) ;
  • Chae Yong-Am (Dept. of Agronomy, Coll. of Agri. and Life Sci., Seoul Nat'l Univ.)
  • Published : 2006.06.01

Abstract

To identity the effect of sowing dates on flowering and maturity of sesame, some agronomic traits including days to flowering and days to maturity were investigated under five different sowing dates. Plant height, days to flowering, days to maturity, days from flowering to maturity and number of capsules per plant were showed significantly different by years, sowing dates and varieties. Interaction between sowing dates and varieties affected to days to flowering, days to maturity, days from flowering to maturity and number of capsules per plant. Plant height, days to flowering and days to maturity decreased significantly as sowing dates were delayed, but number of capsules and seed weight per plant showed highest at the sowing date of May 10. At the regression analysis of shortness degree of growth period by the response of days to flowering and days to maturity under different sowing dates, sesame varieties with earlier flowering habit were much less affected by day length rather than ones with later flowering habit. $R^2$ and gradient value on the days to maturity regression graph were smaller indicating that maturity was much less sensitivity than flowering to the change of day length and temperature in the move of sowing dates. Therefore, it would be concluded that early maturity sesame varieties have higher potential adaptability to various sesame cropping systems in view of their less sensitivity to day length changes under different sowing dates.

Keywords

References

  1. Abel, G. H. 1962. Response of soybeans to dates of planting in the Imperial Valley of California. Agron. J. 53 : 95-98
  2. Boote, K. J. 1980. Response of soybeans in different maturity groups to march plantings in Southern USA. Agron. J. 73 : 854-859
  3. Boquet, D. J., K. L. Koonce, and D. M. Walker. 1983. Row spac­ing and planting date effect on the yield and growth response of soybeans. Louisiana Agric. Exp. Stn. Bull. 754
  4. Byth, B. E. 1968. Comparative photo-periodic responses for sev­eral soybean varieties of tropical and temperate origin. Aust. J. Agric. Res. 19 : 879-890 https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9680879
  5. Johnson, H. W., R. C. Leffel, and H. A. Borthwick. 1960. Effect of photoperiod and time of planting on rates of development of the soybean in various stages of the life cycle. Bot. Gaz. 122 : 77-95 https://doi.org/10.1086/336090
  6. Lee, B. H., J. L. Lee, S. T. Lee, and R. K. Park. 1988. Response of growth and flowering to day-length and temperature in sesame cultivars. Res. Rept. RDA 30(1): 35-40
  7. Lee, J. I., S. T. Lee, G C. Um, and C. H. Park. 1982. Effect of planting date on agronomic characteristics and varietal differ­ences in sesame varieties. Korean. J. Crop Sci. 27(3) : 268-275
  8. Nath, R., P. K. Chakraborty, and A. Chakraborty. 2001. Effect of climatjc variation on yield of sesame at different dates of sow­ing. J. Agronomy & Crop Science 186 : 97-102 https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1439-037X.2001.00456.x
  9. Park, C. H. and J. I. Lee. 1982. Response of flowering in sesame varieties. Educational-industrial cooperation. 180(29) : 1-48
  10. Shekhar, J. 1988. Effects of varieties, dates of sowing, row spacing and their interaction on yield of sesame. Seeds and Farms 14 : 25-35