Course Content
JRF Horticulture
 
Cultivation of Sugarcane

Botanical Information

  • Botanical name: Saccharum officinarum (Tropical Cane)
  • Family: Poaceae (Gramineae)
  • Origin: New Guinea
  • Inflorescence: Open panicle, known as “arrow”
  • Type of crop: Long duration, perennial (grown as annual)

 

Root Types

  • Sett roots: Temporary; support initial growth.
  • Shoot roots: Permanent; provide anchorage.

 

Major Sugarcane Producing Countries

  1. Brazil (since 1979)
  2. India
  3. Cuba
  4. China

 

Climatic Requirements

  • Temperature:
    • Germination: 32–38°C
    • Tillering: 25–30°C
    • Maturity: 15–20°C
  • Rainfall: 1000–1500 mm (well-distributed)
  • Sunlight: Bright sunshine essential
  • Soil:
    • Deep, well-drained loamy soils rich in organic matter
    • pH: 6.5–7.5

 

Varieties

  • Tropical canes (Saccharum officinarum): Thick, juicy, sweet canes, high sugar content
  • Indian canes (S. barberi, S. sinense): Short, thin stalks, early maturing

 

 Land Preparation

  • 2–3 deep ploughings followed by harrowing
  • Land should be well-leveled and weed-free
  • Apply 10–15 tonnes/ha of FYM or compost before last ploughing

 

Planting Time

  • Tropical India: October–November (autumn), January–February (spring)
  • Subtropical India: February–March (spring)

 

Planting Methods

(i) Conventional Methods

  1. Flat Bed Planting: 8–10 cm furrows; setts placed end-to-end; North India.
  2. Furrow Method: 10–20 cm deep furrows; eastern UP, Peninsular India.
  3. Trench/Java Method: U-shaped trench (20–25 cm); used in coastal windy areas.

 

(ii) Improved Techniques

  1. Partha Method: Tamil Nadu; ideal for waterlogged conditions.
  2. Spaced Transplanting Technique (IISR): Nursery with single-budded setts (18000/ha); transplanted after 45–60 days.
  3. Winter Nursery System (IISR): Polythene-covered nursery in December; produces ‘Slip Setts’.
  4. Rayungan Method: Developed buds from mother cane; transplanted on ridges.
  5. Sablang/Sprouting Method: Transplanting tillers with roots.
  6. Tjeblock Method: Half cane planted vertically; buds sprout and used as setts.
  7. Algin Method: Uses top nodes, planted between wheat rows (Allahabad Agri. Institute).

 

(iii) Sett Placement Techniques

  • End to end method – low sett rate.
  • Eye to eye method
  • Double row system – for thick planting.
  • Single bud planting – for nursery-based transplanting.

 

Seed Rate

  • Thick canes: 50–70 q/ha (3-budded setts)
  • Single bud sett: 18000 setts/ha (nursery method)

 

Nutrient Management

  • Nitrogen (N): 150–200 kg/ha (split doses)
  • Phosphorus (P₂O₅): 60–80 kg/ha
  • Potassium (K₂O): 60–120 kg/ha
  • Micronutrients: Zn, Fe as per soil requirement

 

Water Management

  • Water requirement: 1500–2500 mm total
  • Critical stages: Germination, tillering, grand growth, maturity
  • Irrigation interval: Every 7–10 days (summer), 15–20 days (winter)

 

Intercultural Operations

  • Weeding: First 30–60 days after planting
  • Earthing up: 60–90 DAP
  • Trash mulching: Retains moisture and controls weeds

 

Growth Phases

  1. Germination phase: 0–60 DAP
  2. Tillering (Formative) phase: 60–130 DAP
  3. Grand growth phase: 130–250 DAP
  4. Maturity phase: 250–365 DAP

 

Harvesting and Ripening

  • Indicators of maturity:
    • Yellowing of leaves
    • Arrowing, cessation of growth
    • Brittle stalks with metallic sound
    • Bud swelling, eye sprouting
    • Brix % of 16–18% in stalk middle (measured using Hand Refractometer)
    • Glucose < 0.5% (tested using Fehling’s solution)

Chemical Ripening

  • Balsario: 4.5 kg/ha in 1000L water
  • Others: Polaris, Sodium Metasilicate (sprayed 6 weeks before harvest)

 

Yield

  • Average cane yield: 60–100 t/ha
  • Sugar recovery: 10–12%
  • Jaggery recovery: 9–10%
  • By-products: Molasses, bagasse, press mud

 

Importance

  • Raw material for sugar, ethanol (gasohol), jaggery, paper, power
  • Generates employment and income
  • Contributes to bioenergy production and by-product utilization

 

 Sugar Extraction Sources

  • Sugarcane
  • Sugarbeet
  • Sorghum
  • Sugar palm

 

Important Institutions

  • SBI, Coimbatore – Sugarcane Breeding Institute
  • IISR, Lucknow – Indian Institute of Sugarcane Research
  • ISI, Kanpur – Indian Sugar Institute

 

 

Sugar Recovery Statistics

Process

Output

Ordinary Crusher

50–65% juice

Power Crusher

60–70% juice

Vacuum Crusher

70–75% juice

Gur/Jaggery Recovery

9–10% (max 15–18%)

Crystallized Sugar from Gur

62.5%

Sugar from Juice

6–10%

Sucrose Content in Cane

13–24%

Molasses Yield

3.5%

Rab Yield

18–20% of juice

 

Importance and By-products

  • 50% – White sugar
  • 30% – Gur/Jaggery
  • 20% – Alcohol (ethanol for fuel; Gasohol = 80% petrol + 20% ethanol)

 

Comparison: Sugarcane vs. Sugarbeet

Aspect

Sugarcane

Sugarbeet

Extraction

Crushing

Diffusion

Sugar %

6–10%

Higher

Contribution to World Sugar

60%

40%

Used in

Tropics

Temperate Zones

 

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