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    Arable & Livestock

    PGRO adds three new varieties to its Descriptive List for peas and beans

    Matthew TiltBy Matthew TiltNovember 26, 20214 Mins Read
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    Bean-harvest-5

    The Processors and Growers Research Organisation (PGRO) has today added three new varieties – Rivoli, Carrington and Pantani – to its 2022 Descriptive Lists.

    The combinable pea variety Carrington, bred by LS Plant Breeding, joins the list as the highest yielding variety, returning a yield of 117%. Senova’s new yellow pea Rivoli scored an eight for resistance to downy mildew, making it the highest-scoring in this group.

    Winter bean variety Pantani, also from LS Plant Breeding, is an early short-strawed variety with 93% yields, similar to established bean crop Honey. Vespa, produced by Senova, continued to perform well in trials, with top yields of 108% and is closely followed by the company’s Vincent, with yields of 106%.

    In spring beans, Lynx, from LS Plant Breeding, has moved ahead of its competitor’s with a yield of 106% after being second place on the 2021 List, with Ghengis and Stella following at 105%.

    The move from a Recommended List to a Descriptive List means that information on yield and resistance to prominent diseases is presented in line with modern grower requirements.

    PGRO principal technical officer Stephen Belcher said: “Farming is often at the sharp end of unpredictable weather events so having varieties that can provide growers with agronomic performance and still serve the market requirements will gradually come to the fore and be grown in sufficient quantities to serve those markets.

    “Since changing to a Descriptive List model in 2020, we are in a transitional phase. However, there were no changes to the sites this year and we are still using a five-year data set, with no changes to the rigour or quality of data. The changes we have made mean that varieties can be viewed in terms of consistency of performance, helping growers to make informed decisions when it comes to making decisions on seed for the next season.

    “Varietal resistance to downy mildew can vary depending on the races present in the soil but several varieties on the Descriptive List this year are showing very good resistance to the disease. Powdery mildew, which was a significant problem in 2020, was much less so in 2021.

    “Spring beans had a good year with all but one trial taken through to harvest. As with peas, the difference in maturity between early and later maturing varieties was more pronounced in 2021.”

    Steve DL headshot
    PGRO principal technical officer Stephen Belcher

    Combining peas

    • Carrington, as well as being the top yielding variety at 117%, has a very good rating for downy mildew (8).
    • Kameleon from Senova (115%) and Orchestra (111%) move to year five status and maintain a very high yield potential.
    • New to the list for 2022 is Rivoli (Senova) which, although lower yielding, has the best downy mildew rating in this group.
    • Bluetime, Mikka, Greenway, Kactus, Blueman and LG Aviator have also scored 8 for downy mildew resistance and both Blueman and LG Aviator also have high resistance to powdery mildew.
    • Mantara and Rose returned to trials in 2021, with both showing very good resistance to downy mildew (8).
    • Akooma (96%) maintained a 11% yield advantage over Sakura and has a very large seed size.
    • Octavia and Banshee also continued into year five of trials.

    Winter beans

    • The top-yielding variety Vespa is closely followed by Vincent at 106%.
    • Pantani from LSPB, an early, short-strawed variety with similar yields (93%) to Honey (95%), is new to the list for 2022.
    • Variety choice remains similar, with Vincent and Norton being added to the 2021 list previously.

    Spring beans

    • There were no new additions to the Descriptive List for 2022 but Lynx returns to the top of the yield rankings, scoring 106%.
    • Lynx is closely followed by Ghengis and Stella, scoring 105%, and Capri and Macho, scoring 103%.
    • Low vicine/convicine types Bolivia and Allison were subsequently added to the 2021 DL and continue to year four with yields a little below those of Victus. Yukon (8) and Maris Bead (8) show very good resistance to downy mildew and Lynx (7) is just one point lower.
    • Yukon continues to show early maturity, and, in some trials, LG Viper was particularly late to mature.
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    Matthew Tilt
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    Machinery editor for Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer. Matt has worked as an agricultural machinery journalist for five years, following time spent in his family’s Worcestershire contracting business. When he’s not driving or writing about the latest farm equipment, he can be found in his local cinema, or with his headphones in, reading a good book.

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