Abstract

Abstract Influence of nitrogen supply on dry matter production, yield and quality of sugar beet with special reference to temperature and irradiance in pot experiments The influence of nitrogen on yield and quality of sugar beet has been studied in many experiments. In comparison, little is known about the changes in sugar beet metabolism caused by increasing the nitrogen supply. The experiments described in this series of papers deal with the influence of nitrogen supply on mineral metabolism. This first paper describes the influence of nitrogen on dry matter production, yield and quality of beet with special reference to temperature and irradiance. The experiments, conducted in 1988 and 1989 using sand culture in pots, included five nitrogen levels. These treatments were sampled five times during the season and at harvest time. Overall, in 1989 sugar yield (g/pot) was 30 to 50 % greater than in 1988. In 1989 there was only a little more irradiance and duration of sunshine (7 and 11 % respectively) than in 1988, and the larger yield in 1989 was probably caused by a bright period of four weeks in May/June. Where least nitrogen was supplied, deficiency symptoms appeared in early June. When this happened an ammonium‐urea solution was added to the leaves: it increased growth, but not enough to equal the white sugar yield of the treatment where the sand was given the same amount of N at the beginning of the season.

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