Effect of plant spacing on yield and plant characteristics of banana in North Queensland
JW Daniells, PJ O'Farrell, JC Mulder and SJ Campbell
Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture
27(5) 727 - 731
Published: 1987
Abstract
Bananas cv. Williams were grown at a range of plant densities (1 157-2825 plants ha-1) in single and double rows in North Queensland for 3 crop cycles to determine the best spacing in double rows and to compare yield and plant characteristics of different planting systems. Yield increased with increasing density in each crop cycle (from 16 to 2 1 t/ 1000 plants over the range tested). The duration of the crop cycle was unaffected by density in the plant crop. In the ratoons, the length of the crop cycles increased with increasing density (from 9 to 12 months in ratoon 1 and from 10 to 12 months in ratoon 2). Thus productivity (t ha-1 year-1) averaged over the 3 crop cycles only increased by 10 t/ 1000 plants over the range tested. Single rows had taller following suckers than did double rows at harvest of the plant crop (average of 207 v. 177 cm). Together with the shorter pseudostem height at which single rows bunched, this led to more rapid cycling than at similar densities in double rows in ratoon 1 (9 v.11 months). In double rows, spacings of 1.5 m between the 2 rows of the double row and 1.5-1.8 m between plants in the row made for considerably easier selection of followers than did closer spacings.https://doi.org/10.1071/EA9870727
© CSIRO 1987