Effects of planting season and plant cultivar on growth, development, and pod production in snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)
Marlene Pérez-Barbeito A , Ana María González A , Ana Paula Rodiño A , Antonio Miguel De Ron A and Marta Santalla A BA Department of Plant Genetic Resources, Misión Biológica de Galicia, CSIC, PO Box 28, 36080 Pontevedra, Spain.
B Corresponding author. Email: msantalla@mbg.cesga.es
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 59(12) 1121-1129 https://doi.org/10.1071/AR08040
Submitted: 31 January 2008 Accepted: 8 October 2008 Published: 10 November 2008
Abstract
The effects of cultivar and planting season on growth development and pod yield of snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) were analysed in a 2-year, 2-location experiment in Spain. Phenology, pod production, and quality differed significantly among snap bean cultivars. Planting season had a significant effect on most pod traits except the number of seeds per pod, length, thickness, soluble solids content, tenderness, and string, and this effect varied markedly among environments. High and negative correlations for vegetative growth traits between early and late planting seasons confirmed the strong planting season influence on those traits. Fresh pod yields were highest in the early planting season, and the longer pod maturation phase could be considered to be one of the main factors. Planting of snap bean earlier in the season should thus contribute to a longer growing vegetative cycle and greater productivity than normal or summer and late autumn planting. The earliest maturing snap bean cultivars would have the highest fresh pod yields in late planting seasons, while the latest maturing snap bean cultivars would have the highest yields in early and normal planting seasons. These results will allow breeders to optimise the level of earliness for each planting season without reducing the yield. This is a key requirement for snap bean crops, and it is the first step towards selecting parental lines with stability of pod traits to be used in breeding programs for different growing areas and planting seasons.
Additional keywords: precocity, germplasm, pod set, pod yield, breeding.
Acknowledgments
The research was supported by Xunta de Galicia projects (PGIDIT02RAG16E and PGIDIT06RAG32E) and XIBAO S.A.T. M. Pérez-Barbeito and A. M. Gónzalez acknowledge fellowships from the Diputación Provincial de Pontevedra and Spanish Government, respectively, which allowed them to carry out this study. Thanks are due to FEDER, the Diputación Provincial de Pontevedra for farm facilities, and M. Taboada and M. Lores for technical assistance.
Cunha C,
Hinz T, Griffiths P
(2004) Genetic diversity of snap bean cultivars determined using randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers. HortScience 39(3), 481–484.
|
CAS |
Currence TM
(1931) A new pod color in snap beans. Journal of Heredity 22, 21–23.
de la Vega AJ,
Chapman SC, Hall AJ
(2001) Genotype by environment interaction and indirect selection for yield in sunflower. I. Two-mode pattern analysis of oil and biomass yield across environments in Argentina. Field Crops Research 72, 17–38.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Egli DB, Bruening WP
(2000) Potential of early-maturing soybean cultivars in late plantings. Agronomy Journal 92, 532–537.
Egli DB, Bruening WP
(2006) Temporal profiles of pod production and pod set in soybean. European Journal of Agronomy 24, 11–18.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Escribano MR,
Santalla M, De Ron AM
(1997) Genetic diversity in pod and seed quality traits of common bean populations from northwestern Spain. Euphytica 93, 71–81.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Ferreira ME,
de Melo Abreu JP,
Ferreira A,
Andrada L,
Bianco VV, Monteiro AA
(2000) A simple weather driven model to determine harvest date of green beans for freezing using quantitative and qualitative criteria. Acta Horticulturae 533, 489–495.
Gardiner KD, Prendville MD
(1970) Seed percentage, seed length and shear press values in the evaluation of quality and maturity in French beans. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science 45, 303–314.
Jong SK,
Brewbaker JL, Lee CH
(1982) Effects of solar radiation on the performance of maize in 41 successive monthly plantings in Hawaii. Crop Science 22, 13–18.
|
CAS |
Menkir A, Larter EN
(1987) Emergence and seedling growth of inbred lines of corn at suboptimal root-zone temperatures. Canadian Journal of Plant Science 67, 409–415.
Mullins CA, Coffey DL
(1990) Snap bean pod quality as affected by cultivar and harvest. Journal of Production Agriculture 3, 131–135.
Nakano H,
Morita S,
Hattori I, Sato K
(2008) Effects of planting time and cultivar on dry matter yield and estimated total digestible nutrient content of forage rice in southwestern Japan. Field Crops Research 105, 116–123.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Pandy RK,
Herrea WAT, Pendleton JW
(1984) Drought stress of grain legumes under irrigation gradient. I. Yield and yield components. Agronomy Journal 76, 549–553.
Ross E,
Brakke JE, Moore JF
(1956) The objective evaluation of some green bean varieties used for processing in the northwest. Proceedings of the Journal of the American Society of Horticultural Science 68, 398–411.
Santalla M,
Rodiño AP,
Casquero PA, De Ron AM
(2001b) Interactions of bush bean intercropped with field and sweet maize. European Journal of Agronomy 15, 185–196.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Silbernagel MJ, Drake SR
(1978) Seed index, an estimate of snap bean quality. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science 103, 257–260.
Singh R,
Sharma RR, Goyal RK
(2007) Interactive effects of planting time and mulching on ‘Chandler’ strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa Duch.). Scientia Horticulturae 111, 344–351.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Skroch PW, Nienhuis J
(1995) Qualitative and quantitative characterization of RAPD variation among snap bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) genotypes. Theoretical and Applied Genetics 91, 1078–1085.
|
CAS |
Tofiño A, Ocampo C
(2003) Possible contribution of Mesoamerican phenotype in snap beans cultivated in secondary centers. Annual Report Bean Improvement Cooperative 46, 127–128.
Traka-Mavrona E,
Georgakis D,
Koutsika-Sotiriou M, Pritsa T
(2000) An integrated approach of breeding and maintaining an elite cultivar of snap bean. Agronomy Journal 92, 1020–1026.
Yau SK
(2007) Winter versus spring sowing of rain-fed safflower in a semi-arid, high elevation Mediterranean environment. European Journal of Agronomy 26, 249–256.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |