New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural Science abstracts
Identification of onion cultivars for commercial production
in Canterbury, New Zealand
J. E. LANCASTER
E. P. McCARTNEY
W. A. JERMYN
J. V. JOHNSTONE
New Zealand Institute for Crop & Food
Research Limited
Private Bag 4704
Christchurch, New Zealand
Abstract Onion (
Allium cepa L
.) cultivars were
evaluated to identify those that were sufficiently adapted to produce
profitable crops for export in Canterbury, New Zealand. Cultivars were chosen
from latitudes similar to Canterbury within four main geographic regions: North
America, northern Europe, Japan, and Australia/New Zealand. Cultivars were
grown for three seasons and evaluated for maturity, yield, bulb size, bulb
shape, skin colour and number, single centredness, and propensity to bolt. The
characteristics were assessed relative to the industry standard, `Pukekohe
Longkeeper'. No one cultivar was better than `Pukekohe Longkeeper' in every
characteristic. North American cultivars had good size, shape, skin colour,
skin retention, and single centredness, but they were later maturing than
`Pukekohe Longkeeper' and had a high propensity to bolt. Northern European
cultivars had a similar tendency to late maturity and high bolting percentage.
A group of Japanese cultivars were earlier maturing than `Pukekohe Longkeeper'
(up to 30 days) and had a low bolting percentage, but they were lower yielding.
Another group of Japanese cultivars were higher yielding but they were later
maturing with a bolting incidence of 35-50% and were variable in their single
centredness and skin colour. Australian cultivars were very similar to
`Pukekohe Longkeeper', with negligible bolting. One New Zealand cultivar had a
similar yield and 7 days earlier maturity. Only one cultivar, `Eskimo', of
Japanese origin was superior to `Pukekohe Longkeeper' in environmental
adaptation and quality. `Eskimo' was higher yielding, early maturing, and
superior in colour, skin retention, and single centredness. Bulb shape and
bolting incidence were acceptable.
Keywords onion; Allium cepa; cultivar evaluation;
daylength; yield; maturity; skin colour; skin retention; bolting; plant
breeding
New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural Science, 1995, Vol. 23:
299-306
0114-0671/95/2303-0299 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1995
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