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CBN-V Video Archives - S6-11
Electric Capacitance: A Potential Method for Estimating Root Yield
González J.E., H. Ceballos, J.C. Pérez, and F. Calle.
International Center for
Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) Cali, Colombia
h.ceballos@cgiar.org
Cassava is a perennial crop, it has no physiological maturity and
plants fail to exhibit signs when they are ready for harvest.
Cassava can be harvested any time from few months after being
planted, generally harvests are at 9-10 months after planting. Early
bulking is a highly desirable traits for improvement in this crop.
However, since the plant does not exhibit any particular
above-ground sign, it is impossible to detect early bulking
genotypes without harvesting the plants. A method to monitor the
status of the root system is, therefore, highly desirable. A
hand-held capacitance meter was evaluated for its potential to
quantify root mass and, therefore, root yield. A group of clones
showing variation in yield potential, 0.0 to 104 t/ha of fresh
roots, was evaluated. In one experiment, capacitance and root yield
were measured individually on four plants from each of 75 clones. In
the second experiment, average yield and capacitance, also based on
four plants, from 364 clones were measured. Results indicated that
capacitance is positively correlated with root yield. The
correlation coefficients improved considerably when dry matter
content was taken into account, suggesting that the root
mass-capacitance relationship is affected by the water content in
the roots.
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2007©
Donald Danforth Plant Science Center All rights reserved.
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