Gwybodaeth Modiwlau
Course Delivery
Assessment
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | Crop protection plan Prepare a crop protection plan for an arable crop of your choice, grown in either an organic or conventional setting. The information provided should be in a form of a growers guide. Principle components include: 1. Anticipated pests, weeds and diseases, in the order they are likely to occur 2. Control strategies, including opportunities for integrated pest management 2000 Words | 50% |
Semester Assessment | Grassland management assignment This assignment requires you to prepare a detailed grassland management plan based on a given scenario. Principle components to include are: 1. Allocation of land for grazing. 2. Fertilizer and manure program. 3. Pasture maintenance and improvement. 2000 Words | 50% |
Supplementary Assessment | Grassland management resit 2000 Words | 50% |
Supplementary Exam | Crop protection plan resit Students must take elements of assessment equivalent to those that led to failure of the module. 2000 Words | 50% |
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
Explain the mechanisms behind the major biotic constraints to crop productivity in the UK.
Describe the agronomic requirements of a range of non-cereal arable and forage crops.
Describe and critically analyse crop production systems.
Identify and evaluate appropriate crop protection strategies.
Understand the importance of variety production in terms of agronomic and quality characteristics.
Brief description
The module describes the basic agronomy of a range of selected UK arable and combinable break crops including potatoes, sugar beet, oilseed rape and field beans. Agronomic characteristics include rotation, soil type, sowing and plant establishment, nutrition, crop protection, harvesting and post-harvest storage. Contrasting systems approaches to crop and grassland production will be discussed and their effectiveness evaluated. Biotic constraints on production will focus on the impact of diseases, weeds and pests in arable crops, including mechanism and magnitude of yield losses, crop resistance, chemical and biological control, integrated crop management. Finally, the objectives and achievements of arable crop, grass and legume breeding will be reviewed. These lectures will include discussion of the variety development, registration, multiplication and certification procedures and the likely impact of advances in biotechnology on future crop production and management.
Content
- Crop rotation and rotation planning
- Integrated crop management
For grassland and forages
- Management systems, production and environmental protection
- Grazing management
- Forage conservation
- Forage crops
For crop plants incl. oilseed rape, potatoes, sugar beet and field beans :
- Market requirements
- Varietal characteristics and end use
- Rotation, soil preparation and seed establishment
- Nutrition
- Plant protection: weed, disease and pest control
- Harvesting and post-harvest treatment and storage
Crop protection
- Disease development and epidemiology
- Disease management strategies
- Pests and pest damage
- Pest management strategies
- Weed biology and competition
- Weed control
- Integrated crop protection
Plant breeding
Module Skills
Skills Type | Skills details |
---|---|
Communication | Students will write coursework in contrasting styles and formats. |
Problem solving | Students will draw up a crop protection programme for a given set of conditions |
Research skills | Students will research material beyond the scope of the lecture material for both components of coursework |
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 5