Course Content
JRF Horticulture
    About Lesson

    Cultivation of Chrysanthemum 

    General Information

    • Common Name: Chrysanthemum
    • Scientific Name: Dendranthema grandiflora Tzvelev
    • Family: Asteraceae
    • Origin: China
    • Plant Type: Herbaceous perennial plant
    • It is next only to rose in the value of flower trade in the world market.
    • The word Chrysos means ‘golden’ and anthos means ‘flower’
    • Commonly known as Queen of East, Autumn Queen, or Guldaudi
    • Recognized as the National Flower of Japan

     

    Importance and Uses

    • Photo-sensitive short-day plant requires 10 hours of daylight
    • Flowering season: Cool season
    • Best planting time: June–July (late varieties can be planted up to August)
    • Uses:
      • Tall cultivars: Ideal for background planting and cut flowers
      • Dwarf/compact types: Suitable for pots and front row plantation
      • Source of essential oil and sesquiterpenoid alcohol

     

    Commercial and Economic Importance

    • Second most important flower in the global floriculture trade after rose
    • High demand during festivals, marriages, and decoration
    • Export-oriented crop for cut flowers and essential oils
    • Major cultivating states in India: Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh

     

    Flower Types

    Chrysanthemums are classified based on floret arrangement into 5 major groups:

    1. Singles
    2. Anemones
    3. Pompons
    4. Decorative
    5. Large flowered

     

    Climate Requirement

    • Photoperiod: Chrysanthemum is a short-day plant, initiating flower buds when days are less than 14 hours.
    • Ideal Temperature:
      • Vegetative growth: 20–30°C
      • Flower initiation and blooming: 13–15°C (cool temperatures promote better coloration and compact growth)
      • Humidity: Moderate humidity (50–60%) is ideal; avoid excessively wet conditions to reduce fungal risk.

     

     

    Soil Requirement

    • Type: Well-drained sandy loam or loam soil
    • Soil pH: 6.5–7.0 (neutral to slightly acidic)
    • Avoid: Heavy clay or waterlogged soils (root rot prone)

     

    Varieties by Usage

    Usage

    Examples

    Exhibition

    Snow Ball (white), Chandrama (yellow), Bravo (red)

    Pot culture

    Topaz (yellow), Sharad Shoba (white), Alison (mauve)

    Cut flower

    Birbal Sahni (white), Flirt (red), Nanako (yellow), Reagen series

    Loose flower/Field

    CO 1, MDU 1

    Bedding & Borders

    CO 2, Indira, Usha Kiran

     

    Propagation

    By Vegetative Method

    • Suckers
      • Arise from underground stems
      • Planted in nursery beds in January
      • Pinching:
        • First in April, repeated monthly until June
        • After 3rd pinching, cuttings are taken from mother plants

     

    • Cuttings: Terminal cuttings of 5–7 cm taken in June
    • By Seed: Used mainly for hybrid development and maintaining cultivar purity

     

    Pinching

    • Purpose: Encourages side shoots and more blooms
    • Time:First at 4 weeks after planting. Then again on lateral shoots at 7 weeks or 100 days before bloom
    • Types:
      • Soft Pinching: Removal of soft shoot tips and 2–3 open leaves
      • Hard Pinching: Removal of longer portion of the hard shoot

     

    Other Cultural Practices

    Disbudding & De-shooting

    • Standard types: Remove all auxiliary buds; retain central bud
    • Spray varieties: Remove apical bud, retain side buds
    • For 3 blooms per plant: Retain 3 lateral strong shoots, remove others
    • For 1 bloom per plant: Allow main stem only, no pinching
    • De-shooting: Reduces extra branches to improve flower form and size

     

    De-suckering

    • Remove new suckers from plant base during vegetative growth
    • Promotes single, strong stem and healthy plant growth

     

    Staking

    • Necessary for tall varieties
    • Supports upright growth and maintains plant/bloom shape
    • Done using bamboo sticks or similar materials

     

    Irrigation

    • Immediately after planting
    • Then twice a week depending on season and soil
    • Avoid over-irrigation (leads to fungal infections)

     

    Manure and Fertilizer Management

    1. Basal Application (before planting): Well-rotted FYM (Farm Yard Manure): 20–25 t/ha, NPK basal dose: 25:50:50 kg/ha (N:P:K)
    2. Top Dressing: Nitrogen is applied in 3 equal splits – at 30, 60, and 90 days after transplanting.
    3. Micronutrients: Boron, Zinc, and Iron improve flower quality and shelf life. Foliar sprays of 0.2% ZnSO₄ and 0.1% boric acid are beneficial.

     

    Harvest and Yield

    Loose Flowers

    • Harvest Starts: From 3rd month onwards
    • Interval: Every 4 days
    • Maturity stage: For nearby markets: ¾ to full bloom. For distant markets: ½ bloom
    • Crop Duration: Main crop: 6–8 months. Ratoon crop: 4 months

     

    Yield

    • Main crop: 20 tonnes/ha
    • Ratoon crop: 10 tonnes/ha

     

    Pest and Disease Management

    Pest/Disease

    Symptoms

    Control Measures

    Aphids

    Suck sap from buds and young shoots

    Spray Dimethoate 0.05% or Imidacloprid 0.005%

    Thrips

    Flower distortion, silvering of petals

    Spray Spinosad or Fipronil

    Leaf miner

    Tunnels in leaves, drying

    Use Neem oil + sticky traps

    Powdery Mildew

    White powdery spots on leaves

    Spray Carbendazim or Sulfur dust

    Botrytis blight (Grey mold)

    Brown water-soaked spots on petals

    Remove infected parts, spray Captan or Mancozeb

    Root rot

    Plant wilting and yellowing

    Ensure proper drainage, drench soil with Trichoderma or Metalaxyl

     

    Growth Regulators

    • B-Nine (Daminozide): 2,000 ppm applied during vegetative stage helps in compact growth for pot mums.
    • GA₃ (Gibberellic acid): 50 ppm for promoting stem elongation in cut flower production.

     

    Post-Harvest Handling

    • Harvesting Stage:
      • Loose flowers: Fully open stage
      • Cut flowers: Bud showing full color but not open

     

    • Storage:
      • Cut flowers can be stored at 4–5°C with 90–95% RH for up to 2 weeks
      • Use floral preservatives like 8-HQC (Hydroxyquinoline citrate) 300 ppm + 3% sucrose to extend vase life
    • Grading: Based on stem length, flower size, and freshness
    • Packing: Bundles in corrugated boxes with cushioning; avoid crushing

     

    Ratooning in Chrysanthemum

    • After main harvest, plants can be cut back to 10–15 cm above soil
    • Top dress with FYM and nutrients
    • Produces a ratoon crop in 3–4 months

     

     

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