scholarly journals Performance of New Sugarcane Varieties in the Lajas Valley Area

1969 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-47
Author(s):  
G. Ramírez-Oliveras ◽  
M. Pérez-Zapata ◽  
C. González-Molina

Three sites were selected in the Lajas Valley area of Puerto Rico for the performance evaluation of 50 new sugarcane varieties. A plant crop (fall planting) and two ratoon crops were harvested at each site. At the Santa Rita farm, located at the eastern part of the Lajas Valley, the outstanding varieties were: PR 61-902, CP 52-43, and PR 1140. PR 1140 and CP 52-43 are very promising due to their erect growth and good juice quality. At Cerrete farm, situated in the saline and poorly drained soils of the central section of the Valley, the outstand ing variety was NCo 310, which outyielded commercial varieties PR 980, PR 1013, and B 49-119 in tonnage and sucrose content. At the Lajas Substation, in the western end of the Valley, there were no differences in varietal performance for 18 of the 30 varieties tested. PR 61-902 had the best overall yield throughout the Valley .

1969 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-55
Author(s):  
M. Pérez-Zapata ◽  
G. Ramírez-Oliveras ◽  
C. González-Molina

The performance of 34 new sugarcane varieties was evaluated in a plant crop and two ratoons at two sites in southwestern Puerto Rico. At Bonilla farm in Cabo Rojo the five leading varieties were PR 65-413, PR 65-339, PR 62-739, UCW 53-69, and PR 980. PR 980, which is the leading commercial variety of the Cabo Rojo area, ranked fifth in total sugar production per acre. PR 65-413 and PR 65-339 have the greatest potential as commercial varieties for the Cabo Rojo area, since they are high sugar yielders and suited to mechanization. In the humid valley of Central Eureka in Hormigueros, the most outstanding varieties were PR 1152, PR 61-902, PR 1140, CP 52-43, and NCo 310. PR 1152 is high in sugar content and cane tonnage production, and is suitable for mechanized harvesting. PR 1140 and PR 61-902 also had a good sucrose content, but their performance in subsequent crops was poor. NCo 310 and UCW 53-69 are not suitable for mechanized harvesting.


1969 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-77
Author(s):  
Rafael Gandía Caro ◽  
Carlos González Molina ◽  
Edwin Acevedo Borrero

Three sites were selected in the northern humid coastal plains of Puerto Rico for the performance evaluation of 57 new sugarcane varieties. The experiments were located on typical soils of the sugarcane producing northern coastal plain region. A plant crop (fall planting) and two ratoons were harvested at each site. On the San Francisco farm between Arecibo and Utuado, the outstanding new varieties which outyielded all the others tested were PR 64-2548, PR 1152, PR 65-325 and PR 64-2705. Of these, PR 1152 and PR 64-2705 are the most promising varieties in this area because of their erect growth and the good quality of their juice. On the Las Claras farm, near Arecibo, the most promising new varieties for the area were PR 1141 and PR 62-258. On the Consejo farm at Barrio Bajadero, Arecibo, varieties PR 1117, PR 1152, Selección Soller, PR 1048, PR 62-469 and the PR 65-2523 performed best on the basis of cane tonnage. As a commercial variety for the area, PR 1152 was the most promising variety, having a good juice quality and intermediate cane tonnage per acre (40 to 45 tons). It can be harvested mechanically without difficulties because of its erect growth habit. PR 980 produced good tonnage, but was low in sucrose content, indicating that it should not be recommended for the northern humid coastal plains of Puerto Rico.


1969 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-67
Author(s):  
Carlos L. González-Molina ◽  
Rafael Gandía-Caro ◽  
Edwin Acevedo Borrero

Performance of new sugarcane varieties was evaluated in two experiments in the western, humid, coastal plains of Puerto Rico. Results from the plant cane and the first and second ratoon of 30 varieties tested showed that PR 1140 and PR 62-469 are the best varieties for the Coloso Valley. They performed better than commercial varieties of the area, are suitable for mechanical harvesting, and produced sugar more economically. In another 30-variety test in the Añasco Valley, PR 1141, PR 1140, PR 62- 258 and PR 64-610 produced better juice quality than commercial varieties. They are high sugar producers and well adapted to mechanical harvesting. These six superior varieties are recommended for release as commercial varieties for the western region.


1969 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 132-146
Author(s):  
M. A. Lugo-López

Data are presented herein to show the influence of soils and soil conditions on the sucrose yield of sugarcane. Information derived from five broad geographic areas of Puerto Rico, namely: North, south, northeast, east-central, and northwest-interior, was analyzed critically. There were significant differences in the sucrose-yielding potential of several commercial sugarcane varieties among some soils within each area. These differences are attributable to variations in the properties of the various soil types or complexes, or to some factor closely connected with the soil like drainage, chemical reaction, and so on. Some varieties produced higher sucrose yields than others even when growing under similar edaphic conditions. Different varieties of sugarcane produced their maximum yields in different soils, thus indicating a certain degree of variability and adaptation to the soil, as far as this factor was concerned. Within a given area the sucrose-yielding potential of a given soil may be modified considerably by the dominant climatic conditions.


1969 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 379-390
Author(s):  
Víctor C. Godreau ◽  
Carlos L. González Molina ◽  
Angel Vidal Méndez

Sixty sugarcane varieties, sorted in five experiments, were grown in the South Coastal plains for performance evaluation. Experiments were located at Guayanilla farm, at Union and Cintrona farms in Ponce, and at Florida and Centro farms in the Salinas-Santa Isabel area. Experiments were planted and cultivated following the standard practice of the sugarcane industry. Data on rendiments and tons of cane and of sugar per acre were recorded for the plant cane and two ratoon crops of each experiment. Other agronomic characteristics such as growth habits, stooling and ratooning ability, and fiber content were also recorded. Data of the three crops were statistically analyzed for rendiments, TCA and TSA. PR 63-488, CP 52-43 and PR 63-525 were the most promising varieties in the Guayanilla area. Although they did not produce significantly more sugar than the checks, they are better suited to mechanized harvesting. PR 61-632, PR 63-525 and PR 64-1791 were the most promising in the Ponce area (Centro and Cintrona farms) because of their higher sugar yields and their harvestability characteristics. PR 61-632, PR 1152, PR 63-525, PR 64-1791 and PR 1124 were promising in the Salinas-Santa Isabel area. With these new varieties, cost of sugar production is lower than with the old commercial varieties, which are unsuited to mechanized harvesting and have poor juice quality.


1969 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-38
Author(s):  
Alex G. Alexander

Sugar-enzyme relationships were evaluated among 12 Puerto Rico sugarcane varieties. There were two objectives: 1, To discover enzyme-activity trends which would help account for characteristic variety properties; and 2, to seek enzyme-activity trends which indicate at an early age the sugar-producing capacity of new or test varieties. All plants were grown in sand culture with controlled nutrient supply. Leaf and meristem samples were frozen at 10 weeks for sugar and enzyme assay. Sugar and enzyme values varied greatly among the 12 varieties, although at harvest all varieties appeared quite similar as to size and vigor. Fructose and sucrose content differed by as much as tenfold among variety extremes. Amylase, invertase, tyrosinase, and peroxidase all exhibited broad differences. Three variety characteristics were correlated with enzyme action, including cane tonnage, percent-sugar in cane, and sugar per acre. Leaf amylase appeared to affect both cane tonnage and percent-sugar in cane. Leaf phosphatase was particularly active in varieties rated as "low" sugar producers. In meristem, both invertase and peroxidase showed direct correlations with cane tonnage, with activity increasing from low to high as tonnage potential increased. High invertase also correlated with "low" percent-sucrose, and with "low" sugar per acre. Both meristem tyrosinase and peroxidase were excessively active among varieties rated as "low" sugar producers. Since meristematic enzymes can be assayed at a very early age, it was suggested that invertase be employed as an early indicator of sugar-producing potential with test varieties. Peroxidase and amylase also show promise in this respect.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Simiksha Balkissoon

Annually, approximately 90% of the sugarcane planted in South Africa is burnt prior to harvest. The burning of sugarcane is a pre-harvesting technique that is well known to the sugar industry and one that has proven to be efficient. Due to the numerous associated disadvantages that exist, such as the public nuisance of soot and smoke, soil damage and its contributions to air pollution, it is foreseen that government legislation will become more stringent, prohibiting the burning of sugarcane, thereby forcing the industry to consider other alternatives. Processing green sugarcane with brown leaf is one of the sustainable alternatives to be considered which would introduce a beneficial option for both the sugar industry and the environment. For this alternative to be recommended as a viable option, an investigation was required to determine the effects of processing green sugarcane with brown leaf in a sugar factory specifically in alignment with their current juice extraction systems (diffusers). Conducting such experiments on a commercial diffuser presented several challenges. A novel approach was undertaken to develop a pilot juice extraction technique to access and quantify the effects of processing green sugarcane with varying quantities of brown leaf in a sugarcane diffuser on a more controlled scale. Efforts were made to simulate conditions in a diffuser and thereby produce a juice that would closely represent the quality of juice extracted from a sugarcane diffuser. A pilot juice extractor technique was designed, fabricated and its performance verified before determining suitable operating conditions for further experimental work. Experimental juice extraction systems and the applicability of the system to the proposed work was evaluated. The outcome of an extensive review of the literature revealed that the pilot juice extractor design had to be based on an upward forced-flow, submerged column with a steam jacket and electrical heating option. The pilot extractor showed good ability in differentiating between juices extracted from burnt and green sugarcane with and without brown leaf. The extracted juice quality was assessed and compared on the key analytes present in the extracted juice such as gravity purity (sucrose/brix), colour, conductivity ash, reducing sugars (fructose and glucose) and non-sucrose content. An experimental design allowed for key operating conditions of time (30, 45 and 60 minutes) and temperature (75 °C, 0 °C and 85 °C) to be tested. Suitable operating conditions for the pilot juice extractor, which emanated from the experiments, included a temperature of 80 °C and a retention time of 30 minutes. In addition, the juice concentrations in the pilot extractor were found to be different (higher or lower) to the concentrations of analytes present in the juice extracted from two established methods, namely cold digestion and press methods, for most juice quality parameters. The pilot juice extractor performance was subsequently validated against a South African commercial diffuser for 16 different consignments of sugarcane of different varieties and included both green and burnt sugarcane. The diffuser draft juice was compared to the juice obtained from the pilot extractor, cold digestion and press processes. Due to a lack of green sugarcane samples tested at the factory, the correlations between draft juice and the extractor were derived for burnt sugarcane only. The pilot extractor juice quality for burnt sugarcane compared more favourably, in terms of the concentrations of the analytes, with the draft juice quality rather than the quality of the juice extracted from the cold digestion and pressing methods. The investigation of the effects of varying quantities of brown leaf on the quality of juice extracted and the effect on the sugarcane density and percolation rate was carried out using the pilot juice extractor. The tests considered included four different sugarcane varieties (N12, N16, N47 and N39) to obtain a good representation of the different types of sugarcane that is processed in sugar factories. Results showed that an increase in brown leaf content adds to colour, conductivity ash and non-sucrose content and reduces purity, sugarcane density and percolation rates across all tested varieties. The pilot juice extractor presents a suitable method that can be utilised in future studies to assess factory specific combinations of sugarcane varieties, type (burnt or green) and the effects of adding brown leaf in a diffuser, in an effort to understand any potential factory processing impacts. This will aid factories in preparation for how best to handle the situation should they be required to process green harvested sugarcane with brown leaf in the near future.


1969 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-81
Author(s):  
S. Alers-Alers ◽  
M. A. Lugo-López

Twelve field experiments with six sugarcane varieties were planted in randomized block designs at four locations (three experiments in each area). One at each location was planted in January; the second in March; and the third in May. Results were pooled and analyses of variance performed, irrespective of location, for sucrose content, and cane and sugar yield per acre of th e plant crop, the ratoon crop, and the combined plant crop-ratoon crop. These analyses indicated that for harvesting at 12 months, cane harvested in mid-March was higher in sucrose content and yielded more cane and sugar than that harvested in mid-January or mid-May.


1969 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-69
Author(s):  
José Adsuar

Chlorotic streak, a virus disease of sugarcane, is known to occur in Puerto Rico and to cause a reduction in germination, tillering, and yield of sugarcane per acre. Immersion of the infected cane in hot water at 52° C. for 20 minutes inactivated the virus and increased the yield of cane and sugar. It is also known that the hot-water treatment may adversely affect the germination of the different varieties. Thirteen of the best sugarcane varieties as recommended by this Agricultural Experiment Station were tested for susceptibility to the hot-water treatment. The treatment adversely affected the germination percentage of M. 336, B. 41227, and Co. 281. It stimulated the germination of varieties H. 328560, P.R. 1000, B. 37161, B. 40105, B. 37172, B. 371933, P.R. 907, and P.R. 902. It had no significant effect on the germination of P.R. 905 and P.R. 980.


1969 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 228-237
Author(s):  
Raúl Pérez Escolar ◽  
William F. Allison

The effect of water table depth on yield of sugarcane varieties PR 980, PR 1028, PR 1059, PR 1141, PR 64-610, PR 61-632 and PR 64-2705 was studied in lysimeter tanks in the field. Using plastic drains at varying distances and depths, variety PR 980 was studied on a 5-ha farm. Results obtained show that varieties differ in their response to water table conditions. Varieties PR 980, PR 1059, PR 64-610, PR 61-632 and PR 64-2705 yielded significantly more cane and sugar when the water table was lowered. Varieties PR 1028 and PR 1141 did not show statistically significant differences among treatment differentials. Under actual field conditions, using perforated plastic drains, variety PR 980 yielded significantly more sugar than in undrained plots. The results obtained in the lysimeter tanks are in accord with those observed under commercial production.


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