Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditions

ABSTRACT Brassica oilseed species are becoming increasingly popular for industrial uses, with emphasis on biodiesel. It is of importance to evaluate the yield and oil production potential of nontraditional oilseeds for use as feedstock in Brazil. In this study, growth, yield, and oil content and the...

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Main Authors: Doglas Bassegio, Maurício Dutra Zanotto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Agronômico de Campinas
Series:Bragantia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0006-87052020000200203&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-3360c11ab6a944dcbaa7ae121942c0052020-11-25T03:22:08ZengInstituto Agronômico de CampinasBragantia0006-87051678-449979220321210.1590/1678-4499.20190411S0006-87052020000200203Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditionsDoglas BassegioMaurício Dutra ZanottoABSTRACT Brassica oilseed species are becoming increasingly popular for industrial uses, with emphasis on biodiesel. It is of importance to evaluate the yield and oil production potential of nontraditional oilseeds for use as feedstock in Brazil. In this study, growth, yield, and oil content and their correlations were determined for eight accessions of B. juncea and B. rapa in two years under tropical conditions of southeastern Brazil. Significant variation was observed between B. juncea and B. rapa accessions for yield components and oil content. B. rapa was the earliest maturing and had the highest oil content, whereas B. juncea had the highest number of pods and the highest yield and oil yield. Brassica rapa accessions flowered early, with an average cycle of 97 days, whereas B. juncea reached maturation after 110 days on average. Accessions were grouped according to the oil content of each species, with the most promising accessions having an oil content of 45–47%. Accessions of Brassica species had high oil yields, reaching 910 kg ha-1 of oil yield for B. juncea PI 180266. There was a linear correlation between oil content and thousand seed weight, pod length, and seeds per pod of the Brassica species accessions. Considering oil content and oil yield across years, Brassica species show promise as alternative oilseed crops for biodiesel production in tropical conditions.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0006-87052020000200203&lng=en&tlng=envegetable oilsbiodieselbrassicagermplasm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Doglas Bassegio
Maurício Dutra Zanotto
spellingShingle Doglas Bassegio
Maurício Dutra Zanotto
Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditions
Bragantia
vegetable oils
biodiesel
brassica
germplasm
author_facet Doglas Bassegio
Maurício Dutra Zanotto
author_sort Doglas Bassegio
title Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditions
title_short Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditions
title_full Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditions
title_fullStr Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditions
title_full_unstemmed Growth, yield, and oil content of Brassica species under Brazilian tropical conditions
title_sort growth, yield, and oil content of brassica species under brazilian tropical conditions
publisher Instituto Agronômico de Campinas
series Bragantia
issn 0006-8705
1678-4499
description ABSTRACT Brassica oilseed species are becoming increasingly popular for industrial uses, with emphasis on biodiesel. It is of importance to evaluate the yield and oil production potential of nontraditional oilseeds for use as feedstock in Brazil. In this study, growth, yield, and oil content and their correlations were determined for eight accessions of B. juncea and B. rapa in two years under tropical conditions of southeastern Brazil. Significant variation was observed between B. juncea and B. rapa accessions for yield components and oil content. B. rapa was the earliest maturing and had the highest oil content, whereas B. juncea had the highest number of pods and the highest yield and oil yield. Brassica rapa accessions flowered early, with an average cycle of 97 days, whereas B. juncea reached maturation after 110 days on average. Accessions were grouped according to the oil content of each species, with the most promising accessions having an oil content of 45–47%. Accessions of Brassica species had high oil yields, reaching 910 kg ha-1 of oil yield for B. juncea PI 180266. There was a linear correlation between oil content and thousand seed weight, pod length, and seeds per pod of the Brassica species accessions. Considering oil content and oil yield across years, Brassica species show promise as alternative oilseed crops for biodiesel production in tropical conditions.
topic vegetable oils
biodiesel
brassica
germplasm
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0006-87052020000200203&lng=en&tlng=en
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