AGR 301 :: Lecture 12 :: SAFFLOWER Carthamus tinctorious
                  
				
Economic Importance
- Rich in PUFA (78%) – to reduce blood cholesterols
 - Used for preparation of:
 - Margarine, and salad dressing
 - Varnishes, paints and surface coating materials
 - Oil (28-32%) is also used in:
 - Infant food and liquid nutrition formulations
 - Effective non-allergenic dispersant for injectable medicines
 - Charred oil is used to heal sores and rheumatism
 - Flowers
 - For dye extraction –red dye
 - Cosmetics preparations
 - Petals reported to have effects on circulatory systems
 - Cake (30%)
 - Un decorticated cake as manure
 - Decorticated fed to ruminants and mono-gastric animals
 - Can be as human food, if bitter principles and phenolics are removed
 - Hulls (40%)can be used for manufacture of
 - cellulose, insulations, abrasions, hard boards and as fuel
 - Thinned young plants are used as vegetables
 - since contains carotene, riboflavin and vitamins
 - It is crop as border against animals
 
Origin and distribution
- Vavilow(1926): India, Afghanistan or Ethiopia
 - De Candole (1886): Arabia
 - Modern assessment:
 - Area encompassing S. USSR, W. Iran, Iraq, Syria, S. Turkey, Jordan and Israel
 - Distributed now:
 - Between 14° & 45° N and 15° & 35° S
 
World scenario –safflower (million ah & million t)
Country  | 
                    Area  | 
                    Production  | 
                    Productivity  | 
                  
India  | 
                    0.42  | 
                    0.23  | 
                    0.55  | 
                  
Canada  | 
                    0.002  | 
                    0.002  | 
                    1.00  | 
                  
USA  | 
                    0.086  | 
                    0.087  | 
                    1.02  | 
                  
Ethiopia  | 
                    0.009  | 
                    0.006  | 
                    0.67  | 
                  
China  | 
                    0.012  | 
                    0.03  | 
                    2.50  | 
                  
Australia  | 
                    0.033  | 
                    0.036  | 
                    1.09  | 
                  
World  | 
                    0.822  | 
                    0.58  | 
                    0.71  | 
                  
India Scenario – safflower
State  | 
                    Area   | 
                    Production   | 
                    Productivity (kg/ha)  | 
                  
Maharastra  | 
                    263  | 
                    159  | 
                    605  | 
                  
Karnataka  | 
                    81  | 
                    60  | 
                    741  | 
                  
AP  | 
                    17  | 
                    80  | 
                    471  | 
                  
Orissa  | 
                    1.3  | 
                    0.8  | 
                    615  | 
                  
MP  | 
                    1.0  | 
                    0.3  | 
                    300  | 
                  
India  | 
                    364.6  | 
                    228.6  | 
                    627  | 
                  
- A day neutral plant
 - But short day can prolong rosette stage
 - Temp is more important than day length
 - Thermo-sensitive
 - Extremes of cold and heat not suitable
 - Tolerance to low temp at vegetative
 - But susceptible to high temp during flowering
 - For germination 15°C
 - Vegetative : 20-21°C
 - Flowering: 24 to 32°C
 - Rainfall at flowering affects pollination
 - Excessive humidity at any stage affects
 - More suitable for rabi season in India
 
The Plant
- Highly branched, herbaceous
 - Annual height varying from 30-150cm
 - Well defined fleshy tap root system
 - Stem is stiff cylindrical fairly thick at base and thin at top
 - Central stem branches at 15-20cm to secondary
 - Each branch terminates in a flower head
 - The angle of branching is varietals but can be by environment also
 - The leaf deeply serrated on lower stem, short, stiff, ovate at the inflorescence
 - The inflorescence – numerous florets
 - Flower color may vary from whitish yellow to red-orange
 - The capitula, head size may vary from 1.25 to 4.0 cm
 - The fruit achene, resembles small slightly rectangular sunflower seeds
 - Seed weighs 250 – 800mg/grain
 
   
- Fertile, fairly deep and well-drained
 - pH range of 5-8
 - Shallow soils irrespective of fertility seldom produces high yield
 - In traditional belts it is black cotton soil
 - On heavy soils
 - This crop follows early Kharif crops
 - Or may often single crop in Rabi
 - It is considered as salt tolerant next to cotton
 - Tolerant to Na salts but < to Ca & Mg
 - Salinity reduces seed size and oil content
 
Seeds  and sowing
                  Varieties
- K1 120 days, CO 1 125 days
 - Bhima (33% oil) - Maharastra
 - JSF 1 (30%) – Rajasthan & MP
 - Manjira - AP
 - Nira – (30%) Maharastra & TN
 - HUS 305 (35%) for Peninsular India
 
Seed rate
- 7-20 kg depending upon spacing and variety
 
Spacing
- 45 x 15 cm in TN
 - 45 x 20 cm
 - 60 x 30 cm etc
 
Seed treatment
- Pre-sowing seed hardening
 - Use fresh seeds every year
 
Sowing
- From last week of Sep to end of Oct
 - Early sowing has advantage
 - Line sowing using improved seed drill
 - Ferti cum seed drill is more desirable
 - Seeds can be sown behind the plough also
 - Small furrow may be opened and seeds dropped and half coved
 - Depth of sowing may be 5-7.5cm
 - Light planking for the soils which looses moisture
 
Nutrient  management
                  Rainfed  crops
- N ranges from 25 kg N to 50 kg
 - P2O5 – 20 to 50 kg
 - K2O – Mostly not recommended
 - General: 40:20:0
 
Irrigated
- 60:30:20 (Chatisgarh) to
 - 75:75: 35 (Karnataka)
 
Time of fertilizer application
- Rainfed – basal – deep placed by ferti-cum seed drill
 - Irrigated 50% N+ full P & K as basal
 - Remaining half N at 5th week during 1st irrigation
 
Water management
- It is deep rooted xerophytic plant, can thrive under scarce soil moisture
 - One or two irrigations (25 & 75 DAS) is optimum
 - Sensitive to excess moisture at any stage
 - If the soil profile contains 250mm ASM
 - ET of the season is 250-300mm- no response to irrigation
 - Under irrigated condition the crop may be sown under Broad beds of 1.35 to 1.8m and furrow
 - To drain the excess water
 - Points to remember:
 - If one irrigation is possible , provide it at critical period
 - Avoid contact of above ground parts with irrigation water
 
Weed management
- Being wider spaced
 - critical periods for weed management extends up to end of rosette (25-50DAS)
 - Hand weeding and hoeing
 - at 20 and 35 DAS is good
 - Herbicides
 - PPI – Fluchloralin 0.75 to 1.0 kg
 - PE – Oxadiazone – 0.75 -1.0 kg or
 - PE – Pentimethalin – 0.75 kg
 
Important intercultural operations
- Thinning to single plant and filling the gap at the early stage (before 15DAS)
 - Nipping of central shoot to induce branching
 - Bird damage
 - By parrots at Isolated pockets
 - Cultivate in contiguous block
 - Bird scaring - morning and evening during
 - Seed filling to physiological maturity
 
Harvesting
- Duration of the crop varies due to regions
 - 115-140 days
 - 120-125 days in TN
 - Gujarat & Orissa – 140-150days
 - In cooler regions 150-180days
 - Maturity
 - When the lower leaves and most of the bracteoles dry and brown
 - Harvest in the early hours
 - Shattering minimum
 - Spines relatively soft
 - Combine harvester is becoming popular now since
 - Manual harvesting, bundling, threshing are all becoming problematic
 - Duration of the crop varies due to regions
 - 115-140 days
 - 120-125 days in TN
 - Gujarat & Orissa – 140-150days
 - In cooler regions 150-180days
 - Maturity
 - When the lower leaves and most of the bracteoles dry and brown
 - Harvest in the early hours
 - Shattering minimum
 - Spines relatively soft
 - Combine harvester is becoming popular now since
 - Manual harvesting, bundling, threshing are all becoming problematic
 - Yield
 - In improved agro-techniques are used
 - Under scanty moisture – 800-1200kg/ha
 - Under favourable 1500-2000 kg
 - Under irrigated – 1800-2800kg/ha
 - Storage
 - 5% moisture, clean and dry
 
 Cropping system
- It is potential crop to replace dry rabi crops
 - Wheat, coriander, linseed, chickpea, pulses
 - In traditional areas it is raised as intercrops
 - Sorghum, wheat, linseed, chickpea, coriander etc.
 - Sequence cropping
 - Farmers rarely raise more than one crop due to non availability of moisture
 - There is scope for double cropping either preceding with Kharif crop or after rabi by irrigation.
 
Multiple choice questions
- Scientific  name of safflower is ______
a. Helianthus annuus b. Carthamus tinctorious c. Sesamum indicum - Oil  content of safflower is ______ 
a. 24-28 % b. 26-28 % c. 28-32 % - Which  of the following is used for dye extraction
a. Sunflower b. Safflower c. Sesame - Total  production of safflower in the world is _________ m tonnes
a. 0.93 b. 0.98 c. 0.88 - Total  production of safflower in India is _________ m tonnes
a. 0.70 b. 0.43 c. 0.67 - Spacing  followed for safflower in Tamil Nadu is______
a. 40 x 20 cm b. 60 x 30 cm c. 45 x 15 cm - Seed  rate for safflower varies from _______ to _______ kg/ha depending upon the variety  and spacing
a. 7 – 20 b. 5 – 10 c. 20 – 25 - General  fertilizer recommendation for rainfed safflower is ______ kg NPK /ha
a. 60:30:20 b. 40:20:0 c. 75:75:35 - Saturated  fatty acid content in safflower is ________ 
a. 12 % b. 15 % c. 10 % - Mono  unsaturated fatty acid content in safflower is ________ 
a. 12 % b. 15 % c. 14 % 
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