Feasibility Analysis of Expanding Winter Rapeseed Northwards in China
39 Pages Posted: 27 Feb 2024
Abstract
With high elevations, complex topographies, cold winter, diverse ecosystems, and a long history of oilseed Brassica rapa cultivation, Northwest China is rich in winter-hardy B. rapa germplasms. Using these germplasms, a number of ultra-winter-hardy rapeseed cultivars were developed in past three decades, leading to a large-scale northward expansion of winter rapeseed production in China. Based on 19 years of field trial data, this study was to assess the feasibility of growing winter rapeseed in the areas of northern China where conventionally no winter rapeseed had grown prior to availability of the ultra-winter-hardy B. rapa cultivars. The impacts of the major climate factors on overwintering rates and yields were analyzed. Using the boundary line analysis, the suitable growing regions for different cultivars were defined. The ultra-cold-resistant cultivars displayed exceptional adaptability in frigid environments, with overwintering rates exceeding 70% under conditions of extreme winter temperatures as low as -37°C. Suitability analyses show that up to 7.00E+05 km² of the farmland in Northern China are suitable for winter rapeseed production, giving a potential winter rapeseed acreage of 3.50E+04 km². This may result in an approximately 3.48-fold increase in total rapeseed production in Northern China, which may significantly enhance the China’s self-sufficiency in vegetable oil production. Our data suggest that these new ultra-winter-hardy rapeseed cultivars have made winter rapeseed production feasible, profitable, environmentally beneficial, and economically important in northern China.
Keywords: winter rapeseed, Brassica rapa L., cold resistance, Adaptability, Climate factors, Development potential
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