A-686 (Revised)
Canola Production
A-686 (Revised), AUGUST 2007
Duane R. Berglund, Professor Emeritus and Former Extension Agronomist
Kent McKay
, Area Extension Agronomy Specialist
Janet Knodel
, NDSU Extension Entomologist
Canola has become
a popular oilseed crop
for North Dakota. The state leads the U.S. in canola production, with
approximately 92 percent
of domestic production.
Canola is a specific edible type of rapeseed, developed in
the 1970s, which contains about
40 percent oil. The term "canola" is a name registered
by the Western Canadian Oilseed Crushers Association.
Canola varieties must have an erucic acid content of less than
2 percent and also have less than 30 micromoles of glucosinolates per gram of
seed. Canadian and U.S. farmers mostly grow low erucic
acid and low glucosinolate varieties. High erucic acid oil rapeseed
is grown and used for industrial lubricants. This type of
rapeseed mostly is grown in Europe, although some
production occurs in Canada and the U.S.
In January 1985, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration granted canola oil GRAS (Generally Recognized as
Safe) status for use in human foods. This has led to greatly
increased sales and demand in the United States, with only part of
the demand being met by U.S. production. Canola oil
has achieved worldwide commodity status and is used extensively
in Japan, Canada and Europe.
Adaptation
Canola (Brassica napus L.) varieties have been developed as both
spring and winter annuals. The spring type is best adapted to North
Dakota conditions. The winter types have
not survived consistently in trials
in North Dakota, northwestern Minnesota or in the Prairie
Provinces of Canada. Canola can be grown on most soil types. It is best suited
to clay-loam soils that do not crust.
If grown on soil with poor internal drainage, good surface drainage
is essential because it cannot tolerate standing water or waterlogged
soils. Canola is less tolerant to drought than small-grain crops. It could
be considered as a crop to plant on fallow if moisture recharge on
recrop land is limited.
Rotations
Canola best follows cereal grains or fallow in rotation. A preferred
crop rotation would have canola planted at least two cropping years
between plantings. However, if planting canola after one cropping year,
we strongly recommend growing a variety that is moderately resistant
or resistant to blackleg. Canola is susceptible to sclerotinia stem rot.
Infection risk increases if canola is planted closely in rotation with
other highly susceptible crops, such as sunflower, dry edible beans
or crambe. At least two years should separate canola and sugar
beet plantings. If planting canola within three years of susceptible crops,
a fungicide application may be needed.
Less susceptible crops that could be planted successfully in a
close rotation with canola are rowed soybeans, flax, semileafless field
pea or lentil. In years when ideal environmental conditions favor
air-borne spore movement, all canola plantings without fungicide applied,
regardless of rotation intervals, may have economic losses due to sclerotinia.
Canola is certain to shatter seeds,
and volunteer plants are a probability the next season. Cereals
should follow canola to allow the use of certain broadleaf phenoxy
herbicides for control. Production of canola
and tame mustard on the same farm should be avoided. A mixture of
the two crops reduces the market value of both. In addition,
conventional canola should not be planted on
fields with heavy infestations of
wild mustard. Roundup Ready, Liberty Resistant and
Clearfield canola all could be planted on
highly infested wild mustard fields.
The persistence of herbicide residue remaining from application to
prior growing crops and weeds can injure new canola seedlings. These
include but are not limited to sulfonylurea, imidazolinone and triazine classes
of herbicides. Always refer to the herbicide label information
pertaining to crop rotation
restrictions following their use.The
"North Dakota Weed Control Guide," publication W-253,
includes information on rotation restrictions for certain crops, including
canola following herbicide applications.
Varieties
Canola varieties are of two types:
the Argentine type of the species Brassica
napus and the Polish type of the species Brassica
rapa. Argentine varieties have a higher yield
potential and are also taller and have a higher oil content than Polish
varieties. Argentine varieties require about
95 days to reach maturity, while Polish varieties need
approximately 80 days to reach maturity. Variety trial results are available from
NDSU Research Extension Centers. See NDSU Extension publication
A-1124 for the most recent variety yield results.
Seed Preparation
and Planting
Canola is very susceptible to soil crusting. The seedbed must be firm
to seed canola. Seed and soil moisture contact is critical for rapid
emergence, so seeding canola into dry soil is not recommended. The seedbed
should be prepared in such a manner to minimize wind erosion so
seedlings are not damaged by drifting soil. Harrowing canola seedlings is
not recommended.
Canola can be planted with a variety of seeding equipment. The
optimum depth to seed canola is ½ to 1 inch. Seeding depth should not exceed
1 inch. Canola typically is seeded in 6- or 7-inch rows with a grain drill
or air seeder if uniform depth control can be obtained.
Planting and Seeding
Dates
Canola should be planted late April to early May to achieve the
highest yields. Planting dates delayed beyond
May 15 will result in yield reductions (Figure 1). Significant yield
reduction can be expected if seeding is delayed into June. Canola is very
susceptible to heat and drought stress during flowering. Planting in early May
will reduce the risk of heat and drought stress on the crop. Canola
seedlings are frost tolerant and can tolerate temperatures as low as 24
degrees Fahrenheit.
Dormant seeding - Dormant seeding of canola can be defined as
seeding canola in cold, nearly frozen soil, which will inhibit germination
that fall. The objective is that the seed remains dormant after planting
until early spring. As conditions become favorable in the spring,
the canola germinates and emerges.
Determining when to seed is difficult because growers can't go by a
specific calendar date. The soil needs to be cold, if not frozen (below or near
32 F in the top 2 inches). If soil temperatures warm to 38 F or
higher, the seed will germinate and will be killed once the soil freezes. In
the past, growers have found dormant seeding canola is difficult as the
soil temperatures approached freezing, but before the first snow.
Figure 1. Canola planting date (variety: Westar).

Seeding Rates
Rates of 5 to 8 pounds per acre for Argentine varieties and 5 to 7
pounds per acre for Polish varieties are recommended. A common rule
of thumb for seeding canola is 5 pounds per acre.
A major difference can be found between seeds per
pound among canola varieties. Adjusting for these differences is very
important to avoid a stand being established that is too thick or too thin.
Knowing the number of seeds
per pound of the variety and
establishing a seeding rate by
plant population are very important for a
grower. As a general rule for
the Argentine canola, hybrids will contain approximately 75,000
to 85,000 seeds per pound, whereas open-pollinated varieties will
contain a range of 135,000 to 160,000 seeds per pound. For the Polish
varieties, seed count usually will be greater than 200,000 seeds per pound.
An optimum plant population is
16 plants per square foot or 600,000 plants per acre. A good stand is
10 to 12 plants per acre and a
minimum stand is four plants
per square foot. However, with herbicide-tolerant canola, stands
can be as low as two plants per square foot, providing they are
all uniformly spaced.
Fertilizer
Canola is similar to small grains in
its response to fertilizer and levels
of soil fertility. Nitrogen and sulfur are the key elements for high
canola yields. Nitrogen and potash materials should not be placed in direct
contact with the seeds but should be
broadcast or applied in a band at least 2 inches away from the seed.
A soil test is recommended for
proper assessment of nutrient need. See NDSU Extension publication
SF-1122, "Fertilizing Mustard and Canola," for additional information.
Canola is a high user of sulfur (S).
A 2,000 lb/A canola crop contains about 12 lb/A sulfur in the straw
and 15 lb/A sulfur in the seed.
A 40 bu/A wheat crop, on the other hand, contains only 5 lb/A sulfur
in the seed and 7 lb/A in the straw.
The consequences of low soil S levels are very serious in canola
production. Low sulfur can make the difference between having a crop and
not having a crop. Responses to sulfur fertilization have been
demonstrated in North Dakota. A composite soil test for sulfur may not
represent sulfur fertility variation across the field. The current S soil test tends
to overestimate available sulfate-S and field variability is huge.
Therefore, at medium to low sulfur soil test levels, 20 to 30 lb/A of S
is recommended. At high soil
sulfur levels, 10 to 15 lb/A still
is recommended.
Canola takes up sulfate-S. The form of sulfur fertilizer may be
ammonium sulfate (21-0-0-24S) or a blend of ammonium sulfate and
degradable elemental sulfur (0-0-0-90S). A blend is recommended because in
sandy soils, sulfate may leach during early season rains, while the
elemental sulfur may degrade during a moist season to supply needed S later in
the year.
Providing adequate sulfur before or at planting is best. However,
if deficiencies are identified early in the season before significant
flowering, yield responses are still possible by applying a rescue treatment
of ammonium thiosulfate (12-0-0-26S)
or ammonium sulfate. The earlier
a treatment is made, the greater
the yield response. Little sulfur
is absorbed by leaves. A rescue treatment needs rainfall to move
the soluble sulfate to the roots.
Weed Control
Young canola seedlings are very sensitive to early weed
competition. An effective weed control program should include cultural,
mechanical and chemical methods. Once
established, canola is a good
competitor with most weeds.
Wild mustard is a serious seed contaminant in canola and can
cause price discounts or rejection in the market. Special attention should
be given to controlling (prior to planting) or avoiding this weed
in canola fields.
Follow cultural practices to assure
a dense, vigorous developing crop that will compete well with
weeds. Pay attention to seeding dates,
rates and depth of seed placement. Perennial weeds should be
controlled the year prior to seeding canola.
Since canola is a shallow-seeded
crop, the use of a rotary hoe or springtooth harrow for weed
control is discouraged. These tillage tools
can injure and destroy the canola seedlings, greatly reducing
stands. Trifluralin (several brands) and Sonalan (ethalfluralin) are the
only preplant soil-incorporated herbicides labeled for control of weeds in canola.
Use the lower rates on sandy,
coarse-textured, low organic
matter soils of these two herbicides.
Trifluralin and Sonalan always must be preplant-incorporated in the
soil prior to planting. Both will control annual grasses and some
broadleaf weeds, such as pigweed, common lambsquarters and kochia.
Wild mustard will not be controlled.
Clopyralid is labeled for postemergence control of
small broadleaf weeds. This herbicide also can be used to control Canada
thistle and perennial sowthistle in canola. Apply clopyralid when the canola
is in the two- to six-leaf stage and prior to bolting.
Sethoxydim (Poast), quizalofop (Assure II or Targa) and clethodim
or Select Max are all labeled for postemergence grass control
in canola. See the label for rates
according to grass weed specie
and size. For best control, grasses should be growing actively and
crop oil adjuvants must be added.
Tank-mixing these grass-controlling herbicides with broadleaf
herbicides can be done in some cases, but follow all label restrictions since
reduced grass weed control may result.
Thoroughly clean and rinse any herbicide residue that may be
harmful to canola prior to filling the spray tank. Sulfonylurea
herbicide residue on phenoxy herbicide in
trace amounts can be very injurious to canola.
Canola is extremely sensitive to drift from most broadleaf herbicides,
such as 2,4-D, MCPA, dicamba, glyphosate and certain sulfonylurea
herbicides. Precautions must be taken to avoid the drift of these herbicides to
canola fields.
An effective weed control program should include
cultural, mechanical and chemical methods.
Herbicide-resistant Canolas
- Clearfield (Imidazolinone)
Resistant Canola
Beyond (imazamox) is registered for use
in Clearfield canola. Beyond at a 4 fl oz/A applied POST to Imi-tolerant canola
from emergence until prior to bloom controls
most annual grass and broadleaf weeds. Apply with NIS at 0.25 percent v/v alone
or with UAN liquid fertilizer at 1 to 2 qt/A. Beyond will not control
ALS-resistant weeds. See label or information on
Beyond for use, weed control, crop
rotation restrictions and other information.
- Liberty (Glufosinate)
Resistant Canola
Liberty (glufosinate) at 28 to 32 fl oz/A applied POST to Liberty-tolerant
canola from cotyledon to bolting stage controls most annual broadleaf weeds, controls
or suppresses grasses and may suppress perennial weeds. Always apply with
AMS fertilizer at 2 to 4 lb/A. Liberty is a nonselective, nonresidual,
contact-type herbicide with limited translocation
and should be applied to small weeds. Refer to label for weeds
controlled, application information and timing,
tank-mix options and other restrictions. Liberty has a unique mode of action
and may be used as another tool in
weed-resistance management.
- Roundup (Glyphosate)
Resistant Canola
Glyphosate applied at a rate of 1 to
1.5 pt/A of a 3 lb ae/gal concentrate
with no more than two applications
to glyphosate-resistant canola from emergence and prior to bolting
(five- to six-leaf stage) controls most
annual and perennial weeds. Apply
with an AMS fertilizer. Application timing may not be appropriate for
effective perennial weed control. Glyphosate is
a nonselective, nonresidual, systemic herbicide. Full labeled rates are
required for broadleaf weed control. Glyphosate
will control weeds resistant to other herbicides. Do not apply after the six-leaf stage
of canola or once bolting has begun because canola injury can occur. Refer to label
for weeds controlled, application information and timing, tank-mix options and
other restrictions.
Influences of
High Temperatures and Drought in Canola
Heat injury to seedlings occasionally occurs on hot, sunny days, with
air temperatures in the range of 85 to
95 F and soil temperatures of 100 F. Heat injury commonly is
associated with drought injury, but excessive heat also will injure or kill
plants even if moisture is plentiful.
When in the blooming stages, heat blasting and/or flower abortion is
a strong possibility. This can vary from field to field and is very
dependent on time of flowering, soil moisture and humidity during the hot
periods. Usually in this situation, one would see no or limited pod growth
and thus no seed. It usually will be in patches on the main stem
and branches as related to time of
flowers and the heat stress.
With good soil moisture under canola, flower abortion usually
will be minimized to some extent.
Both low and high temperatures can adversely affect development prior
to and during flowering. Low, but nonfreezing, temperatures just
prior to flowering slow the rate of plant development. The start of
flowering is delayed or, if begun, the rate of flower opening is slowed and
the amount of pollen shed is reduced. High temperatures at flowering
will hasten the plant's development, reducing the time from flowering
to maturity. High temperatures during flowering shorten the time the
flower is receptive to pollen, as well as the duration of pollen release and
its viability. This can decrease the number of pods that develop and
the number of seeds per pod,
resulting in lower yields.
Once pods are formed, canola is more tolerant than at flowering to
high temperatures. Cool night temperatures at this time also help the
plant recover from extreme heat or dry weather. However, during this
stage, a combination of heat and extreme drought will severely affect the
pod and seed development, including formation of seeds, seed size and
oil content. The seed oil content is highest when seeds mature
under lower temperatures (50 to 70 F). High temperatures during seed
maturation result in reduced oil content. High temperatures, drought and long
days hasten maturity and, in combination, can reduce yield through fewer
pods, with fewer and lighter seeds per pod.
Diseases
Plant diseases can be a serious problem in canola
production. Rotations must be planned carefully to keep disease incidence and
levels low. The two diseases of major importance are sclerotinia wilt
and blackleg. Diseases of canola less often reported are white rust or
staghead, downy mildew, alternaria blackspot and aster yellows.
The blackleg disease occurs in two strains - a mild strain and a
virulent (severe) strain. The virulent strain produces deep-stem girdling
cankers near the soil line. These cankers reduce plant vigor and
may cause lodging. The virulent strain of blackleg first was found
in North Dakota during the 1991 growing season in 23 canola
fields. The blackleg fungus is spread by rain-splashed spores,
wind-borne spores and infected seed. Varieties are available that have good
tolerance or resistance to this disease. As new varieties and hybrids are
introduced, more will be totally resistant to this disease. Generally, the
Argentine varieties are more tolerant, while the Polish varieties are more
susceptible to blackleg.
In areas where the virulent strain
of blackleg is present, crop rotation and selection of resistant varieties
is important to blackleg management. Quadris fungicide is labeled
for control of blackleg applied at a
rate of 6.2 oz/A of product at the two- to four-leaf stage of canola.
Blackleg is not a problem in
mustards (yellow, brown and
oriental), which are highly resistant. See NDSU Extension publication
PP-1024, "Blackleg of Canola,"
for more information.
Sclerotinia stem rot or white
mold
is a canola disease that can be very destructive during periods of
wet weather. The sclerotinia fungus survives up to five or six years in
the soil in the form of hard, black fungus bodies called sclerotia. Whenever
wet weather occurs for a week or two, with moist soil, the sclerotia
germinate to produce tiny mushroomlike bodies called apothecia.
These apothecia are only 1/8 to 3/16 inch across, yet they produce millions
of air-borne spores. Canola primarily is susceptible during all bloom
stages and shortly thereafter. The spores infect the cast-dead canola
blossoms during periods of wet weather.
Infections that start on the dead blossoms spread to adjacent
tissues, resulting in dead branches or dead plants, causing the plants to
lodge. The rotted stems usually have a bleached appearance.
Sclerotinia infections can be serious on canola if cool, wet weather occurs in the
last two weeks of June and continues into early July, when blossoming occurs.
A minimum of a three-year rotation
is recommended for fields that have
a history of heavy sclerotinia or
white mold infestations. During
this rotation, avoid planting highly susceptible crops, including
crambe, sunflower and dry beans.
The fungicides Quadris, Ronilan EG, Thiophanate Methyl (1) and
Endura are all registered for use in the suppression and control of
sclerotinia in canola. Information on fungicides registered is available from
county Extension offices, NDSU Research Extension Centers, the
Northern Canola Growers Association and NDSU Web sites.
Effective suppression of sclerotinia requires timely application of
a fungicide. Quadris should be applied at 10 percent to 25 percent bloom,
or three to seven days after initiation of bloom. The Argentine canola
will have 10 to 18 flowers on the main stem when it is at 10 percent to
25 percent bloom. Quadris should
be applied before or as the first
petals begin to fall. Late application of Quadris is less effective
than timely application.
Ronilan , Thiophanate Methyl (1)
or Endua all should be applied at 20 percent to 50 percent bloom, or
four to eight days after initiation of bloom. Fourteen to 16 flowers will be on
the main stem at 20 percent bloom. The 50 percent bloom stage is
the time of maximum color development in the crop. At that stage, pods will
be on the lower one-third of the
main stem. Once the crop is beyond 50 percent bloom, most fungicides
are much less effective for sclerotinia control.
Quadris should be applied at 6.2
to 15.4 fl oz/A. The 9.6 fl oz rate
has been supported by the registrant
and may provide adequate control if applied before any petals begin to fall.
Ronilan should be applied at 10.6 to 16 oz/A, Thiophanate Methyl (1)
at the 1 to 2 lb/A rate and Endura at the 6 oz/A rate. Extensive data
indicates that the 12 oz rate of Ronilan or the
1 pound rate of Thiophanate Methyl (1) provides excellent
sclerotinia suppression under severe disease pressure when applied early.
The decision to spray should be
made only when: 1) yield potential
is above normal (at least 40 bushels
or 2,000 lb/A) when canola prices are minimal, 2) weather leading to
early bloom has been wet (at least 1 to
2 inches of rain in the two weeks prior to early bloom), 3) more rain
or high humidity is expected, and
4) sclerotinia has been a problem
in recent years in fields currently planted to canola or in other
fields nearby. A fungicide is more likely
to be needed if canola is planted on tight rotations (three years or less).
See the following NDSU Extension publications on the control
of sclerotinia in canola:
PP-1201, "Sclerotinia Stem Rot of Canola
- Biology and Management," and
A-1208, "Canola Flowering and Fungicide Application Timing."
Insects
Severe damage to canola plants
can be caused by overwintering populations of flea beetles feeding
on newly emerged seedlings during May through June. Adult beetles
feed on the cotyledons and first true leaves, causing the typical
shot-holed appearance. Severely damaged seedlings may die, and less
seriously damaged plants may suffer a
reduction in vigor and stamina.
Hot, sunny weather is conducive
to feeding activity, while cool,
damp weather slows feeding and favors crop growth. Hot and
dry weather may cause seedlings to
wilt and die, resulting in partial
to complete crop loss.
In some instances, the infestation
of a field can occur as a creeping movement from plant to plant
across a field; in other instances, the entire field may become quickly and
evenly infested. Severe damage usually does not occur once the crop
advances beyond the four- to six true-leaf stage because vigorously growing
canola plants can outgrow the beetle
defoliation.
No major effects on plant vigor have been noted from the larval feeding
on the plant roots. Occasionally in August, large numbers of
newly emerged adults will move onto semimature canola plants and
devour the epidermis of the stems, leaves and pods, and may cause pod
shattering and small seeds. In most years, the crop will be sufficiently advanced
to escape serious damage.
Cultural methods can help reduce plant losses caused by flea beetles.
A firm seedbed that is adequately fertilized will help plants
outgrow beetle damage during the susceptible seedling stage in the spring.
Zero-tillage has been shown to reduce flea beetle damage per plant,
and planting B. napus rather than B.
rapus resulted in less crop damage. Seeding in the fall also enables seedlings
to escape severe flea beetle injury because plants were in the
true-leaf stage by the time flea beetle damage occurred. Other effective
strategies from previous research include increasing seeding rates and
planting large rather than small seeds at wide row spacings. Integrating
cultural strategies can help minimize the
use of insecticides for control of
flea beetles in canola production.
A few flea beetles or scattered
shot-holing in leaves of a seedling crop are not necessarily cause
for alarm. However, if the flea beetles
are numerous and feeding holes cause approximately 25
percent defoliation (economic threshold), immediate control is
recommended. The key to flea beetle control is frequent monitoring during
the susceptible seedling stage.
Registered seed treatments labeled for control of flea beetles in
canola include Gaucho 600 (imidacloprid), Prosper/Poncho (clothianidin),
Helix Lite (thiamethoxam) and
Helix XTra (thiamethoxam).
All seed treatments must be applied by commercial seed treaters and
are not for use in hopper-box, slurry-box or other seed treatment
applications at or immediately before planting.
Foliar insecticides registered under state label for control of flea
beetle, diamondback moth, Bertha
armyworm and other insect pests include methyl parathion,
bifenthrin (Capture 2 EC, Sniper, Binfenture
EC-CA, Tundra), deltamethrin
(Delta Gold), gamma-cyhalothrin (Proaxis) and
lambda-cyhalothrin (Taiga Z and Warrier). Follow
safe pesticide practices when spraying flowering canola to protect
honeybees. Check federal and state labels for rate use on specific
canola pests. For more complete information on insect control in canola, see
NDSU Extension publication
E-1143, "North Dakota Field Crop Insect Management Guide"
(current year) or visit NDSU Web site
www.ag.ndsu.edu/pubs/plantsci/pests/e1143w1.htm
.
Swathing and
Harvest Management
Swathing canola at the optimum stage of ripening reduces green
seed problems and seed shatter losses and ensures the quality required for
top grades and prices. Inspect fields every two to three days when
some color change occurs in the first formed pods on the bottom of
the main stem.
To determine when a field of canola is ready to swath, examine
plants from different parts of the field.
The stage of maturity in an evenly maturing field will vary from plant
to plant and from area to area within the field. When examining the
plants, take into account varying soil types, low-lying areas, available soil
moisture and exposed early
ripening areas.
Examine only those pods on the main stem. Seeds in pods on the
bottom third of the main stem were formed earlier and will turn color
much sooner than seeds in the pods on the top third of the plant. When
the overall moisture content of seed from the total plant averages 30 percent
to 35 percent, about 30 percent to
40 percent of the seeds in pods on
the main stem will have changed color or have started to change
color. Seeds with only small patches of color should be counted as
color-changed. Remember, the
color of the seed is more important than the overall color of the field
in determining the stage of maturity.
Most of the seeds that have changed color will be from the bottom third
of the main stem. When seeds in the bottom pods slightly turn color,
seeds in the top, last-formed pods
are filled or nearly filled.
Seeds in all pods on a plant complete filling (physiological maturity)
at about 40 percent moisture and
then slowly turn from green to light yellow, or reddish brown, brown
or black, depending on the variety.
In hot (90 F), dry weather, canola seed can go from 10 percent to
50 percent seed color change in
just three to five days or less.
Once filled, the seeds rapidly lose moisture at about 2 to 3
percentage points or more each day, depending on the weather.
Swathing early can be beneficial if a hard fall frost is expected. Frost
fixes the chlorophyll, or green color, in immature seed, making it difficult
to remove during processing. Fall frosts rarely freeze to ground level.
A swathed crop will not only lie below the coldest night
temperatures, but much of the seed will benefit from the insulating properties of
the swath and residual soil heat, preventing or reducing
frost-fixed chlorophyll.
Another sign of canola being very near the swathing stage is the
natural yellowing and senescence of leaves and leaf drop. When canola
plants consist only of stems, stem branches and pods, the crop is probably
very near the optimum time for swathing. Swathing can begin in
Argentine canola at 15 percent seed color change. Polish canola should be
left until 20 percent to 25 percent seed color change.
Cutting Height
The swather should be run just low enough to get all the seed
pods, leaving the maximum amount of stubble to anchor the windrow
and ensure adequate air circulation through the windrow. Most
stubble height varies from 10 to 12 inches
in canola fields after swathing.
Swather Table and Throat
The windrow must flow smoothly through the swather without
bunching. Bunching leads to uneven drying and combine plugging. Therefore,
a good swather must have enough depth of table (40 inches) to
handle the crop material. It also should have a large throat opening - at least
as wide (40 to 54 inches) as the distance between the two swather canvases
on center-delivery swathers. It should have a vertical clearance for
the windrow of at least 30 to 40 inches.
The table canvas should be strong enough to carry the heavy load
of material cut and should be run just fast enough to keep the table clean.
If possible, canvas speed should be varied depending on the maturity
of the crop cut. A fast canvas tends to produce a hollow, twisted
windrow; a slower canvas produces a more compact windrow, but it may
bunch and sit high on the stubble. Increase the canvas speed until the windrow
is pressed into the stubble.
The reel should be set as high and as far forward as possible. Reel
speed should be set to correspond with
the forward speed of the swather. Finger reels work best in canola
to help bring the material back onto the table and gently handle the
ripened canola. For a lodged or leaning
canola crop, finger reels are highly recommended for ease of swathing.
Ordinary end dividers that are long and gently sloping are generally
less prone to plugging than short, abrupt types. When the crop is tall,
tangled and lodged or laid across the seeded rows, divider plugging is
almost inevitable unless special vertical cutter bars or power blades are
fitted on the swather. These can cause minor loss of pods and whole
seed tops, but they prevent stops and bunching. In badly lodged
crops, swathing in a direction parallel to
the direction in which the crop is leaning may be advantageous.
In areas where windrows could be lifted and blown by the wind, a
light roller pulled behind the swather
will help anchor the windrow in the stubble. The roller should be set
so that it just anchors the windrow into the stubble without shelling any
ripe pods. Excessive roller pressure will produce a windrow that is
too compact to dry quickly and difficult to pick up without shelling
the canola. NDSU research has shown that swath pack density and
seeding rates had little effect on green seed
of canola.
Swathing Overly Ripe Fields
Swathing late, when seed moisture content is much lower (around
80 percent seed color change), will result in fluffy windrows
susceptible to blowing and increased shattering. To reduce shattering losses,
overripe fields should be swathed when humidity is high, such as after a
rain, after a heavy dew or at night.
Swathing Unevenly
Maturing Crops
Determining when to swath
unevenly maturing fields is difficult. When checking uneven
stands, producers should do an early count on the ratio of early emerged
canola that is bolting or starting to flower
to the late emerged flush of young, more immature plants.
Knowing the ratio of early to late emerged canola plants allows
making a better decision as to how soon to swath or whether to wait until
the later crop catches up. If the stand is 20 percent to 25 percent early and
75 percent to 80 percent late, then waiting to cut later may be the
best strategy to reduce the amount of green seed.
Curing in the Swath
Canola should be allowed to cure
and ripen from 10 to14 days in the swath before combining. If
combined too early, the chance of increased green seed in the harvested crop
is much greater.
While starting on the early side for swathing is better, the same
doesn't necessarily hold true for combining. Hot or windy weather at or
after swathing can cause canola seed to be at the appropriate moisture
content for combining before it has cured
and cleared the green chlorophyll. This occurs because the plant dries
up before sufficient moisture can move into the seed to finish curing it.
Canola requires at least 20 percent moisture in the seed for the
maturing process to take place and eliminate the green seed color. Checking
both moisture content and green seed count before starting to combine
is important. Delayed combining
can help clear the green color,
particularly if the swath sits
through several heavy dews
or light rain showers.
Combining Canola
in Swaths
All combines work fairly well to harvest canola. Combines should
be checked thoroughly before starting on canola. Cover any holes or
worn spots in the table/platform or within a combine with duct tape or
caulking compound. Leakage can occur easily in the stone trap, top feeder
housing or through lower inspection doors.
Travel speed of the combine should be equal to that of the pickup so
a gentle lifting of the swath occurs without tearing or pushing. Set
the pickup to rub just under the swath.
Cylinder speeds will depend on canola crop conditions. Speeds
of one-half to two-thirds of that used for small grains often are used for
canola. The speed should be just fast enough to break open the pods.
Speed reduction is important to prevent overthreshing of pods and stems
and overloading the sieves. Cracked canola is caused by impact when
the cylinder speed is too high. Examine the threshed seed for cracked
canola. Push your arm into the seeds and observe if cracked canola seed
pieces stick to your skin or hair on your arm. Reduce cylinder speeds if
excessive cracking does occur.
Fan speed should be set low to avoid blowing canola seed out with
the chaff. This will allow large amounts of pods in the return. Start with a
low fan speed and increase gradually until separation of chaff and
seed occurs with no canola being blown over the chaffer sieve.
See NDSU Extension publication
A-1171, "Swathing and Harvesting
Canola," for more detail.
Direct Combining Canola
Current recommendations and guidelines are to swath at the
optimum stage to reduce green seed and seed shatter losses. The
canola swath is allowed to cure and ripen
for a minimum of 10 to 14 days
before harvesting.
Small-scale and field-scale studies were conducted from 2004 to 2006
by NDSU Research Extension Center agronomists comparing
direct combining canola with traditional methods of swathing and
harvesting. The results of this research indicate that canola can be successfully
direct combined. All combine headers- rigid, flex and draper- all
performed well with direct combining canola and did not cause any harvest
loss, compared with the pickup head. When harvested at the optimum
time, direct combining canola can be successful with equal to higher
yield than traditional harvest methods of swathing and combining.
Straight combining also results
in less green seed and generally higher oil content and test
weight than swathing and combining.
One important consideration with direct combining is that it is
more vulnerable to seed and shatter loss when harvest is delayed past
the optimum. When direct combining canola, harvesting at the
optimum time is very important. The optimum harvest time is identified as the
first time the harvest moisture falls below
10 percent. Research trials indicate that seed loss due to
shattering increases significantly with direct combining approximately 10
days after the optimum harvest time
is reached.
Spodnam/Biovital is a spray polymer that has been developed and
labeled to reduce the seed shatter loss in
pod-bearing crops. Spodnam or Biovital was evaluated at many
trial locations. No difference was found
in yield with the direct combining treatments with and
without Spodnam/Biovital when canola was harvested at the optimum time
or when harvest was delayed past the optimum.
Practices to
Reduce Green Seed
Problems have occurred with green seed in North Dakota. Cool, wet
and overcast weather during the growing season promotes green seed
problems in all canola varieties, and these problems can be made worse
by sulfur deficiency in some cases.
Temperature at maturity is an important factor in
chlorophyll breakdown. Cool temperatures and light frosts in August and
September slow the enzyme activity that breaks down chlorophyll. Frost from 32 to
33 degrees Fahrenheit disrupts that system; more specifically, it
can reverse it and restart the synthesis process. This is very sensitive in
the seed development stage, and the window is very narrow. This
can cause differences between adjacent fields that are only days apart
in maturity or differ in uniformity
of maturity.
Even canola swathed four to six days before a frost will retain
relatively high levels of chlorophyll. Two
or more germination flushes and growth stages result in
immature seed at swathing and green seed at harvest. Thin stand counts can
result in plants with more branching and more variability in seed maturity,
and crops are more likely to have immature seed at swathing.
Late-seeded canola may be
impacted by all these situations.
Growers can make management decisions to reduce green seed problems
in the future:
- Choose fields with better surface drainage and fertility.
- Seed as early as possible in
the spring to allow for the maximum ripening time.
- Provide a firm seedbed to achieve correct depth of
planting and good seed-to-soil contact for quick and
even emergence.
- Swath at the recommended color stage for the
weather conditions.
- Maintain adequate fertility levels for canola growth
and ripening. Canola stressed from nutrient deficiency will
not mature evenly.
- Take soil samples for a
general indication of nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium
and micronutrient levels.
- Sample plant tissue early during rosette stage to
allow time for corrective micronutrient applications.
- Fields with high fertility
levels can be expected to
delay maturity in years with below-normal growing
degree days' accumulation or heat units (cool years).
Storage and Drying
Storage and handling problems of canola are similar to those of flax.
The seed is round, small, heavy and runs freely. Very tight truck boxes
and storage bins are required. The seed can sweat for up to six weeks
after harvest, so heating and spoilage can occur, even at 9 percent to 10
percent moisture levels. Canola as low as 8.5 percent moisture should be
examined for heating at regular intervals.
If harvested at high moisture, natural air drying or artificial drying can
be used. To maintain seed quality,
a drying temperature of 110 F or
less is maximum for commercial production. If a significant amount
of foreign material (straw) is
included with the seed, running it over a scalper may be
advantageous before drying and binning.
Canola Products
Canola varieties produce meals having about 38 percent protein.
The amino acid distribution is very complementary to soybean oil
meal, and the two meals often are included in the same ration. Feeding trials
have shown that animals perform better when fed a mixture of the two
meals than when fed either alone.
In Canada, canola meals are
recommended for up to 10 percent to 20 percent of the ration for
chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese, pigs, dairy
and beef animals. Edible rapeseed oil or canola oil has been used in
some countries for the past two decades and was approved for human
consumption in the U.S. by the Food and Drug Administration in 1985.
Canola oil usually is blended
with other vegetable oils for the production of various solid
and liquid cooking oils and salad
dressings. Canola oil is high in
oleic acid relative to other vegetable oils and has been competitive in
price with other cooking oils.
Marketing
Most canola is not grown under contract. The U.S. farm program
has a good support loan program
for canola oilseed production.
U.S. grain standards for grading canola and rapeseed were
established Feb. 28, 1992, by the U.S. Grain Inspection Service. (See Table 1.)
Factors of most importance in
the determination of grades are admixtures and soundness.
Grading admixtures include such factors as foreign material, common
wild mustard seed, tame brown and yellow mustard seed, earth
pellets, sclerotinia, ergot and stones.
Soundness refers to broken seed
not assessed to dockage, seeds distinctly green after cracking,
heat damage and odor.
Table 1. USDA Grade and Grade Requirements
for Canola.
| U.S. Grades |
1 |
2 |
3 |
| Grading factors maximum percent limits of:
|
|
|
|
| Damaged kernels
|
|
|
|
| Heat damaged |
0.1 |
0.5 |
2.0 |
| Distinctly green |
2.0 |
6.0 |
20.0 |
| Total |
3.0 |
10.0 |
20.0 |
| |
|
|
|
| Conspicuous admixture*
|
|
|
|
| Ergot |
0.05 |
0.05 |
0.05 |
| Sclerotinia |
0.05 |
0.10 |
0.15 |
|
Stones |
0.05 |
0.05 |
0.05
|
| Total |
1.0 |
1.5 |
2.0 |
| Inconspicuous admixture** |
5.0 |
5.0 |
5.0 |
| |
|
|
|
| Maximum count limits of: |
|
|
|
| Other material |
|
|
|
| Animal filth |
3 |
3 |
3 |
| Glass |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| Unknown foreign
substance |
1 |
1 |
1 |
U.S. sample grade - canola that:
does not meet the requirements for U.S. Nos. 1, 2 or 3, or
has a musty, sour or commercially objectionable foreign
odor, or
is heating or otherwise of distinctly low quality
* Conspicuous admixture is all matter other than canola that
is readily distinguishable from canola and remains in
the sample after the removal of machine-separated dockage.
It is not limited to ergot, sclerotinia and stones.
** Inconspicuous admixture. Any seed that is difficult to
distinguish from canola. This includes, but is not limited
to, common wild mustard (Brassica kaber and
B. juncea), domestic brown mustard (Brassica
juncea), yellow mustard (B. hirta) and seed other than the mustard group.
Grower Considerations
1. Don't grow canola varieties
without knowing where to deliver to a market.
2. Plant recommended varieties of
good quality and good yield potential.
3. Plant early for more profitable yields.
4. Select weed-free fields and control
weeds prior to planting.
5. A firm seedbed preparation is
critical; therefore, take time to prepare a proper seedbed.
6. Manage canola to avoid green seed.
7. Monitor fields for flea beetles.
8. Swath at proper maturity. Swathing
early reduces yield; delays allow
excessive shattering.
9. Monitor seed in storage for heating
and spoilage because canola requires more attention than cereal grains.
10. Don't put canola and other
sclerotinia (white mold)-susceptible crops in the rotation closer than every three years.
11. Promote the use of canola oil to
consumers.
12. Consider joining the Northern
Canola Growers Association.
Canola Information Resources
North Dakota State University
Oilseeds and Row Crops
www.ag.ndsu.nodak.edu/plantsci/rowcrops/main.htm
North Dakota State University Extension
Procrop:
www.ag.ndsu.nodak.edu/aginfo/procrop/procrop.htm
Sclerotinia Risk in Canola Forecast Program
www.ag.ndsu.nodak.edu/aginfo/sclerotinia/sclerotinia.htm
Canola Insects Information
www.ag.ndsu.nodak.edu/aginfo/entomology/entupdates/index.htm#Cano
Northern Canola Growers Association
2718 Gateway Drive, #301
Bismarck, ND 5850
Telephone: (701) 223-4124 or toll-free (877)
585-1671
Web address: www.northerncanola.com
U.S. Canola Association
600 Pennsylvania Ave. S.E., Suite 320
Washington, DC 20003
Telephone: (202) 969-8113
Web address: www.uscanola.com
Canola Council of Canada
400 167 Lombard Ave., Winnipeg, MB R3B 0T6
Telephone: (204) 982-2109
Web address: www.canola-council.org/
Publications
Canola Growers Manual
Canola Council of Canada
NDSU Extension Service Publications
A-1124 Canola Variety Trials
SF-1122 Fertilizing Mustard and Canola
W-253 North Dakota Weed Control Guide
PP-1024 Blackleg of Canola
PP-1201 Sclerotinia Stem Rot of Canola
A-1208 Canola Flowering and Fungicide
Application Timing
A-1171 Swathing and Harvesting Canola
E-1143 North Dakota Field Crop Insect
Management Guide
PP-622 North Dakota Field Crop Fungicide Guide
A-686 (Revised), AUGUST 2007
anola Production
|