PPT ON Production Technology of Bottlegourd |

Summary:

Explore the production technology, cultivation practices, and varieties of bottle gourd. Learn about training, pruning, harvesting, and postharvest storage methods for optimal yield.

PPT Slide 1

  • .Production Technology of Bottle gourd

PPT Slide 2

  • Introduction and importance:
  • Bottle gourd is commonly grown vegetable in india. It is commonly grown in Ethiopia, Africa
  • and central America and other warmer regions. The fruits of bottle gourd can be used to
  • make sweets like halva, kheer, pedha, burfi and pickles.
  • As a vegetable it is easily digestible, even for patients. Leaf decoction is made and it is good
  • for jaundice. The fruit have cooling effect and it is cardio tonic and diuretic. The pulp is good
  • for overcoming constipation, cough, night blindness and antidote for against some poisons.
  • Fruits are variable in shape and size, they are 15- 100 cm long and light greenish in color.
  • Tender fruits are widely used as vegetables, hard dried shell is used for making bowls,
  • bottles, containers, pipes and musical instruments. Seeds and seed oil is edible and suited for
  • dry areas.
  • Kofta is most popular preparations, fruits contain 0.2% protein, 2.9% carbohydrates, 0.5% fat
  • 11mg vitamin C per 100g fresh weight.
  • It is good for people suffering from indigestion.

PPT Slide 3

  • BOTTLE GOURD
  • • B.N. – Lagenaria siceraria
  • • Family – Cucurbitaceae
  • • Monoecious ; DNP
  • • Isolation distance – F – 800 m ,C – 400 m
  • • chromosome number : 2n = 22
  • • Origin – S. Africa
  • • Bottle gourd or calabash is a delicately flavored, cucurbita family vegetable. It is one of
  • the chief culinary vegetables in many tropical and temperate regions around the world.
  • Bottle gourd is a fast growing, annual climber (vine) that requires adequate sunlight for
  • flowering and fruiting.

PPT Slide 4

  • It can be grown under wide range of soils and require trellis to support spread.
  • Its intensely branched stems bear musky, deep green, broad leaves just similar
  • as that in pumpkins, and white, monoecious flowers in the summer. After
  • about 75 days from the plantation, young, tender, edible fruits evolve that will
  • be ready for harvesting. Bottle gourds come in wide range of shapes and
  • sizes. The fruit features oval, pear shaped or elongated and smooth skin that is
  • light green in color. Internally, its flesh is white, spongy and embedded with
  • soft, tiny seeds. The fruits are used as a vegetable or making sweets (e.g.
  • halwa, kheer, pedha and barfi) and pickles. As a vegetable, it is easily
  • digestible even by patients. The dry hard shells are used to make musical
  • instruments, pipes, bowls, bottles, containers, floats for fishing nets etc.
  • Kofta is a most popular preparation. Good source of fibre free carbohydrates
  • and fruit pericarp for crude fibre. Oil extracted from kernels of seed is used as
  • hair oil.

PPT Slide 5

  • Botany
  • Bottle gourd is a climbing annual with a duration of 3 ½ to 4 months. Flowers are solitary,
  • chalky white in colour and open at night. Fruits are fleshy and vary in shape and size.

PPT Slide 6

  • CLIMATE AND SOIL :
  • Soil : Loam or sandy loam soil, Too much acidic soil pH is
  • not suitable (less than 5.5).
  • Seed germination : 25-30ºC.
  • day temperature : 30 -35ºC
  • Night temperature : 18-22ºC (Higher temperature induces
  • maleness.) It is grown in summer and rainy season. In
  • summer, the crop is sowing :summer- Dec-Jan ,rainy -June-
  • July.

PPT Slide 7

  • Climate :
  • Bottle gourd is a typical warm season vegetable. Though crop tolerates cool climate better than musk
  • melon and water melon, it cannot tolerate frost. Well drained fertile silt loam is ideal for cultivation of
  • bottle gourd. Crop is quite suitable for river bed cultivation because of its deep tap root system. A deep soil
  • supports vines for a long period.
  • Season:
  • Crop is grown during summer and rainy season. In places where water is not scarce, it is grown throughout
  • the year.
  • Land preparation and sowing :
  • Land preparation and sowing are similar to that of ash gourd. Land is ploughed to a fine tilth and furrows are
  • made at a distance of 2.0-3.0 m. After incorporating farmyard manure, seeds are sown in furrows at a
  • distance of 1.0-1.5 m between plants. When bottle gourd is trained on bower, follow a spacing of 3.0 x 1.0
  • m. In sloppy land, sowing is done in pits with 2-3
  • plants / pit. Soaking seeds 12-24 hours in water or in succinic acid (600 ppm) for 12 hours improves
  • germination. Seed rate recommended is 3-6 kg/ha.

PPT Slide 8

  • • Seed rate – 3- 3.5 kg/ha
  • • seed count ; 450-500 seeds/100 g
  • • Spacing – 2 x 1 m
  • • FYM : 20 t/ha
  • • Training- bower
  • • N : P :K = 40-60 : 40-60: 60-80 kg/ha.
  • • As per VNMKV recommendation 100: 50: 50 kg N P K /ha.
  • • The first half dose of N must be applied as basal while the other half
  • 30DAS.
  • • The crop requires frequent irrigation as high humidity is needed for
  • prolific bearing. During hot and humid weather, irrigation after every third
  • or fourth day is needed.

PPT Slide 9

  • Bottle gourd cultivation.

PPT Slide 10

  • VARIETIES :
  • • Arka Bahar
  • • Kalyanpur Hari Lambi – fruits slightly dark green in color
  • • NDBG 1 – gives early yield in upland conditions ; highly preferred for diara cultivation
  • • NDBG 4
  • • PBOG 1
  • • Phule BTG 1 – produces comparatively more female flowers at basal nodes
  • • Punjab Komal – variety with shortest duration from fruit set to maturity , 70DAS • Punjab Long
  • • Punjab Round
  • • Pusa Manjari – high yielding hybrid , round fruited
  • • Pusa Meghdoot – F1 hybrid between Pusa Summer Prolific Long and Sel. 2.
  • • Pusa Naveen – perfectly cylindrical fruit, free from crook neck
  • • Pusa Summer Prolific Long – can be grown in rainy season also.
  • • Pusa Summer Prolific Round – prolific bearer and heavy yielder.
  • • Rajendra Chamatkar
  • • Kalyanpur Long Green – developed at CSAUAT Vegetable Research Station, Kalyanpur, Kanpur
  • • Samrat – released from Mahatma Phule Krishi Vidyapeeth, Rahuri ; Box packing
  • • Pusa Hybrid 3 – for distant market, very early maturing

PPT Slide 11

  • Training and pruning :
  • As bottle gourd puts good vegetative growth, proper training and pruning are advantageous. Training
  • plants to bower helps to trap sunlight more effectively and yield as high as 80 t/ha was obtained. Axillary
  • buds of growing vines should be removed till vines reach the bower height. When vine reaches bower,
  • apical bud is removed at 10-15 cm below bower to allow 2 or 3 branches to spread on bower. After
  • formation of 4-5 fruits, vines are again pruned allowing 2-3 axillary buds only to grow on primary vines. It
  • is also advisable to remove all yellow and pale colored older leaves near bottom portion.
  • Harvesting :
  • Fruits are harvested at tender stage when it grows to one third to half. Fruits attain edible maturity 10-12
  • days after anthesis and are judged by pressing on fruit skin and noting pubescence persisting on skin. At
  • edible maturity seeds are soft. Seeds become hard and flesh turn coarse and dry during aging. Tender
  • fruits with cylindrical shape are preferred in market. Harvesting starts 55-60 days after sowing and is
  • done at 3-4 days intervals. While harvesting, care should be taken to avoid injury to vines as well as to
  • fruits. Plucking of individual fruits is done with sharp knives by keeping a small part of fruit stalk along
  • with fruit. Average yield is 20-25 t/ha for open pollinated varieties and 40-50 t/ha for F1 hybrids. Fruits
  • can be stored for 3-5 days under cool and moist condition. For export purpose, fruits are packed in
  • polythene bags and bags are kept in boxes of 50-100 kg capacity.

PPT Slide 12

  • • Fruit set can be improved by spraying the plants with MH (400 ppm)
  • along with 100kg N/ha.
  • • The crop is ready for harvest approx. 60-70 DAS.
  • • The fruits take 12-15 days after fruit setting to reach marketable stage.
  • • Fruits should be picked after every 34 days.
  • • Smaller and tender fruits fetch a better price in the market.
  • Yield – 20t/ha .
  • hybrids – 40-50 t/ha

PPT Slide 13

  • Postharvest, storage and marketing:
  • •Improper harvesting , handling, transportation, and distribution results in significant loss.
  • •several post harvest factors like physical, physiological, mechanical and hygienic
  • conditions.
  • •These can be reduced by proper cultural operations, harvesting, transportation, storage,
  • and pre and post harvest treatments.
  • •processed product is tuty fruity.
  • •fruits can be stored for 3-5 days under cool and shady conditions, in cold storage they
  • can be stored for long periods.
  • •fruits are packed in polythene bag and kept in small boxes and these boxes are
  • transported to market.
  • • for export fruits should be picked at edible stage and kept in boxes pf 50-100kg capacity.
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