Preface
This research report
presents the results of the 2000 statewide performance tests of soybean,
sorghum grain and silage, grain millet, sunflower, and summer annual forages.
The tests for various evaluations were conducted at several or all of
the following locations: Tifton, Plains and Midville in the Coastal Plain
region; Griffin and Athens in the Piedmont region; Calhoun in the Limestone
Valley region; and Quincy and Marianna, Florida. For identification of
the test site locations, consult the map below.
Agronomic information
such as plant height, lodging, disease occurrence, etc., is listed along
with the yield data. Information concerning planting and harvest dates,
soil type, and culture and fertilization practices used in each trial
is included in footnotes. Since the average yield for several years gives
a better indication of a variety's potential than one year's data, multiple-year
yield summaries have been included.
In order to have
a broad base of information, a number of varieties, including experimental
lines, are included in the trials, but this does not imply that all are
recommended for Georgia. Varieties best suited to a specific area or for
a particular purpose, and agreed upon by College of Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences agronomists, are presented in the 2001 Spring Planting Schedule
for Georgia (available from your county extension office). Pesticides
used for production practices are included for the benefit of the reader
and do not imply any endorsement or preferential treatment by the University
of Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station. For additional information,
contact your local county extension agent or the nearest experiment station.
The least significant
difference (LSD) at the 10 percent level has been included in the tables
to aid in comparing hybrids. If the yields of any two hybrids differ by
the LSD value or more, they may be considered different in yield ability.
Bolding is used in the performance tables to indicate hybrids with
yields statistically equal to the highest yielding entry in the test.
The standard error (Std. Err.) of an entry mean is included at the bottom
of each table to provide a general indicator of the level of precision
of each experiment. The lower the value of the standard error of the entry
mean, the more precise the experiment.
This report is one
of five publications presenting the 2000 performance of agronomic crops
in Georgia. For more information concerning other crops, refer to one
of the following research reports: 2000 Corn Performance Tests (Report
668), 1999-2000 Small Grains Performance Tests (Report 669), 1999-2000
Canola Performance Tests (Report 667), and 2000 Peanut, Cotton and Tobacco
Performance Tests (Report 671).
This
report, along with performance test information on other crops, is also
available at our web site:
www.griffin.uga.edu/swvt
Additional
information may be obtained by writing J. LaDon Day, Crop and Soil Sciences
Department, University of Georgia, Georgia Experiment Station, Griffin,
GA 30223-1797.
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