Abstract

Records of plant development in some twenty-five multifactorial experiments were collected with the object of analysing the effects of nutrient level, density, spatial arrangement and variety on seed production in linseed. By sampling techniques estimates were made of plant density, the extent of basal branching, the number of capsules per stem, the number of seeds per capsule and the seed weight. The expected plot yields, calculated from these data, were in good agreement with the harvested yields.In factorial trials, involving additions of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, only a change in the nitrogen level increased the yield of seed, and this gain was largely determined by an increase in the production of capsules and not by any alteration in either the number of seeds per capsule or the seed weight.Over a range of density of thirty to eighty plants per square foot the number of capsules produced per plant was inversely correlated with density. When the distance between drills was maintained at 6–7 in. and the density varied by changing the seed rate then—on an area basis—both capsule production and seed yield were rarely affected since the product of plant number and capsules per plant remained relatively constant. On the other hand, if the rate of seed delivery in the drill was kept the same and the distance between the drills was the variable for density then with a narrow width of drill (4 in.) the increase in plant density more than offset the fall in capsules per plant.Further experiments comparing drilling and crossdrilling did not wholly confirm the importance of spatial arrangement. There was, however, evidence that at densities over eighty plants per square foot, besides a further reduction in capsules per plant, the number of seeds per capsule was depressed. Varieties were characterized by differences in seed size, the number of seeds per capsule, capsules per plant and the ability to produce more capsules at high levels of nitrogen. The superiority of the yielding capacity of Royal could be ascribed to the high rate of capsule production. Such varietal differences in capsule production have not been reported previously, and since the number of capsules per plant is greatly influenced by varying density, the common practice of basing selection on spaced plants, may not give a true assessment of capsule formation at densities optimal for seed production.

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