ABSTRACT
Evaluation of Yield Component Traits of Honeybee-Pollinated (Apis mellifera L.) Rapeseed Canola (Brassica napus L.)

Ximena Araneda Durán1*, Rodrigo Breve Ulloa1, José Aguilera Carrillo1, Jorge Lavín Contreras2, and Marcelo Toneatti Bastidas1
 

Recent introduction of hybrid varieties raises the question if bees (Apis mellifera L.) contribute as pollinator agents in developing the full yield potential of rapeseed (Brassica napus L.). In order to evaluate the yield achieved by B. napus cv. Artus pollinated by A. mellifera testing was carried out in the district of Freire, La Araucanía Region, Chile. This consisted in isolating or excluding rapeseed plants from pollinators with exclusion cages. Treatments applied were total exclusion (T1), partial exclusion (T2) and free pollination (T0) with a density of 6.5 hives ha-1, in order to determine the following yield components traits: grains per silique, siliques per plant, 1000 grain weight and yield. The experimental design used was randomized complete blocks with three treatments and three replicates. Results obtained show that the parameter least affected by bee intervention was the grains per silique variable. In contrast, siliques per plant and 1000 grain weight parameters presented significant differences, contributing to a yield greater than 5 t ha-1; which represented a figure 50.34% higher than in the treatment without bees. It may be concluded that the inclusion of bees in crops is fully justified as a production tool.

Keywords: bee hives, pollination.
1Universidad Católica de Temuco, Campus Norte, Rudecindo Ortega 02950, Casilla 15-D, Temuco, Chile. *Corresponding author (xaraneda@uct.cl).
2Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Francisco Bilbao Nº 931, 3° piso, Casilla 16-D, Temuco, Chile.