Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India

Cassava is cultivated in Tamil Nadu in an area of 85,983 ha with an annual production of about 2.5 million t of roots (1993-94). At the world level, Tamil Nadu ranks first in yield, with 28.7 t/ha, as compared to the Indian average of 22.8 and a world average of 9.6 t/ha. In Tamil Nadu cassava is gr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thamburaj, S.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81966
_version_ 1855534190500511744
author Thamburaj, S.
author_browse Thamburaj, S.
author_facet Thamburaj, S.
author_sort Thamburaj, S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cassava is cultivated in Tamil Nadu in an area of 85,983 ha with an annual production of about 2.5 million t of roots (1993-94). At the world level, Tamil Nadu ranks first in yield, with 28.7 t/ha, as compared to the Indian average of 22.8 and a world average of 9.6 t/ha. In Tamil Nadu cassava is grown mainly in Salem and Kanyakumari districts located in the dry western zone (60% irrigated and 40% rainfall) and the high rainfall southern zone (mostly rainfed), respectively. The area under cassava is increasing in other districts of Tamil Nadu as well. With respect to varieties, about 50% of the total area is grown with high-yielding varieties, like H-226 and MVD-1 in most areas of Salem district, and with Co-1, Co-2, Co-3 in different parts of Tamil Nadu. Locally adapted and traditional varieties, like Burma and Malabar, are still under cultivation, but they are low yielding and susceptible to cassava mosaic disease. The cassava germplasm collection has now increased to 480 accessions, including some CIAT clones. Two early maturing clones were identified, i.e., H-1 19 from CTCRI, Trivandrum, and Co-3 developed by Tamil Nadu Agr. Univ. in Coimbatore. The crop duration is 7 1/2 to 8 months with a high yield of 32 and 35 t/ha, respectively, and a starch content of about 30 % . For the high rainfall zone of Kanyakumari district, the local clone Adukkumuttan performs well, giving a 15 to 28% increase in yield compared to the released varieties. For coastal areas of South Arcot district, two clones, i.e. ME-46 and ME-10, were shown to be better, with a yield of 44 t/ha; these are now under further evaluation. Under the Asian cassava breeding network a total number of 85 hybrid progenies were received from CIAT/Colombia and the Thai-CIAT program. Preliminary evaluation has indicated that a few clones have high root yields of more than 5 kg/plant, high starch content of over 35%, field tolerance to mosaic virus and a shorter crop duration of 7 to 8 months. The optimum fertilizer rate for Co-3 cassava under irrigated conditions was found to be 60:60:120 kg N-P2O5-KO/ha, which increased the yields by 36% over the control. For the recently developed short-duration clones, like H-1 19, CI-590and S-856, under irrigated conditions the optimum spacing and fertilizer requirements are 75 x 75 cm and 75:25:75kg N-P2O5-K2O/ha, respectively. Application of Azospirillum inoculum at 2 kg/ha as basal dressing with recommended fertilizers, combined with three foliar sprays of zinc sulfate (0.5%) and iron sulfate (1.0%) at 60, 75 and 90 days after planting, increased the root yield and starch content of Co-1 and Co-2 varieties. Under abundant water supply, cassava intercropped with groundnut can be irrigated at 0.6 IW/CPE ratio with an interval of 12 days and the application at 10 t/ha of coconut husk waste. Under limited water supply, irrigation may be reduced to 0.45 IW/CPE ratio with an interval of 16 days.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace81966
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1998
publishDateRange 1998
publishDateSort 1998
publisher International Center for Tropical Agriculture
publisherStr International Center for Tropical Agriculture
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace819662025-11-05T17:04:53Z Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India Thamburaj, S. manihot esculenta research farm area production high yielding varieties crop yield variety trials hybrids clones trace elements fertilizer application postharvest technology prices starch domestic markets investigación superficie de la explotación producción variedades de alto rendimiento rendimiento de cultivos ensayos de variedades híbridos oligoelementos aplicación de abonos tecnología postcosecha precios almidón mercado interior Cassava is cultivated in Tamil Nadu in an area of 85,983 ha with an annual production of about 2.5 million t of roots (1993-94). At the world level, Tamil Nadu ranks first in yield, with 28.7 t/ha, as compared to the Indian average of 22.8 and a world average of 9.6 t/ha. In Tamil Nadu cassava is grown mainly in Salem and Kanyakumari districts located in the dry western zone (60% irrigated and 40% rainfall) and the high rainfall southern zone (mostly rainfed), respectively. The area under cassava is increasing in other districts of Tamil Nadu as well. With respect to varieties, about 50% of the total area is grown with high-yielding varieties, like H-226 and MVD-1 in most areas of Salem district, and with Co-1, Co-2, Co-3 in different parts of Tamil Nadu. Locally adapted and traditional varieties, like Burma and Malabar, are still under cultivation, but they are low yielding and susceptible to cassava mosaic disease. The cassava germplasm collection has now increased to 480 accessions, including some CIAT clones. Two early maturing clones were identified, i.e., H-1 19 from CTCRI, Trivandrum, and Co-3 developed by Tamil Nadu Agr. Univ. in Coimbatore. The crop duration is 7 1/2 to 8 months with a high yield of 32 and 35 t/ha, respectively, and a starch content of about 30 % . For the high rainfall zone of Kanyakumari district, the local clone Adukkumuttan performs well, giving a 15 to 28% increase in yield compared to the released varieties. For coastal areas of South Arcot district, two clones, i.e. ME-46 and ME-10, were shown to be better, with a yield of 44 t/ha; these are now under further evaluation. Under the Asian cassava breeding network a total number of 85 hybrid progenies were received from CIAT/Colombia and the Thai-CIAT program. Preliminary evaluation has indicated that a few clones have high root yields of more than 5 kg/plant, high starch content of over 35%, field tolerance to mosaic virus and a shorter crop duration of 7 to 8 months. The optimum fertilizer rate for Co-3 cassava under irrigated conditions was found to be 60:60:120 kg N-P2O5-KO/ha, which increased the yields by 36% over the control. For the recently developed short-duration clones, like H-1 19, CI-590and S-856, under irrigated conditions the optimum spacing and fertilizer requirements are 75 x 75 cm and 75:25:75kg N-P2O5-K2O/ha, respectively. Application of Azospirillum inoculum at 2 kg/ha as basal dressing with recommended fertilizers, combined with three foliar sprays of zinc sulfate (0.5%) and iron sulfate (1.0%) at 60, 75 and 90 days after planting, increased the root yield and starch content of Co-1 and Co-2 varieties. Under abundant water supply, cassava intercropped with groundnut can be irrigated at 0.6 IW/CPE ratio with an interval of 12 days and the application at 10 t/ha of coconut husk waste. Under limited water supply, irrigation may be reduced to 0.45 IW/CPE ratio with an interval of 16 days. 1998 2017-06-20T09:00:11Z 2017-06-20T09:00:11Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81966 en Open Access application/pdf International Center for Tropical Agriculture Regional Cassava Program for Asia Thamburaj, S.1998. Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India . In: Howeler, Reinhardt H. (ed.). Regional Workshop Cassava Breeding, Agronomy and Farmer Participatory Research in Asia (5, 1996, Hainan, China). Cassava breeding, agronomy and farmer participatory research in Asia: Proceedings . Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), Regional Cassava Program for Asia, Bangkok, TH. p. 111-130.
spellingShingle manihot esculenta
research
farm area
production
high yielding varieties
crop yield
variety trials
hybrids
clones
trace elements
fertilizer application
postharvest technology
prices
starch
domestic markets
investigación
superficie de la explotación
producción
variedades de alto rendimiento
rendimiento de cultivos
ensayos de variedades
híbridos
oligoelementos
aplicación de abonos
tecnología postcosecha
precios
almidón
mercado interior
Thamburaj, S.
Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India
title Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India
title_full Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India
title_fullStr Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India
title_full_unstemmed Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India
title_short Cassava research program at Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) in India
title_sort cassava research program at tamil nadu agricultural university tnau in india
topic manihot esculenta
research
farm area
production
high yielding varieties
crop yield
variety trials
hybrids
clones
trace elements
fertilizer application
postharvest technology
prices
starch
domestic markets
investigación
superficie de la explotación
producción
variedades de alto rendimiento
rendimiento de cultivos
ensayos de variedades
híbridos
oligoelementos
aplicación de abonos
tecnología postcosecha
precios
almidón
mercado interior
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81966
work_keys_str_mv AT thamburajs cassavaresearchprogramattamilnaduagriculturaluniversitytnauinindia