An increasing number of growers are producing quinoa in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. This novel crop has historically had a high market value and adds diversity to crop rotations.
Quinoa has been the subject of much interest in the last 10 years as a potential crop throughout many regions of the U.S. and Canada. However, widespread production has not yet been adopted.
In the Willamette Valley, adoption of quinoa in cropping systems has been hampered by production, processing and marketing difficulties. To help address those challenges, we tested 17 quinoa varieties and four planting dates to identify the most suitable options for our region. We also tested harvesting and processing methods.
Background
Recent trends in health foods and gluten-free products have helped quinoa become mainstream, both as a grain substitute and in processed products like energy bars and chocolate desserts. While quinoa is a traditional food in South America, the U.S. is by far the largest importer of quinoa worldwide for use as a rice or grain alternative and as an ingredient in processed products. Pockets of domestic production have increased in the last several years, mostly in the Intermountain region and portions of California. Large-scale manufacturers of products containing quinoa currently import quinoa from Andean countries because top-producing countries have intensified production dramatically in the last decade to meet global demand.
U.S. consumers, meanwhile, have favored local, farm-grown quinoa with distinctive quality attributes such as color and taste. These unusual quinoa varieties are typically more profitable for domestic farms than mainstream varieties of quinoa. However, market prices have dropped an estimated 40%–75% from the record high prices of 2010–2012 due to increased worldwide production.
In addition to price competition from imported quinoa markets, seed processing is a challenge for domestic quinoa production. The small seed size and thick stems make separating seeds from crop residue difficult without modifying equipment. Quinoa also produces compounds, called saponins, that coat the seed. Saponins are bitter and may have evolved to discourage feeding by insects or birds. Seeds destined for human food need to be processed to have saponins removed through abrasion, washing or both, prior to packaging or processing into food products. This process is not currently available on a large scale for most regions in the U.S., although a handful of private companies are developing capacity in the western U.S.
The largest obstacle to widespread quinoa production is a lack of consistently high seed yields. In many areas of the U.S., quinoa trials have not consistently produced seed due to insect feeding damage and heat intolerance. For example, many varieties of quinoa will not produce seed if summer temperatures rise above 95° F during flowering and early seed set.
However, the cooler, wetter areas west of the Cascades have produced more stable yields. As a result, recent research in the Willamette Valley has sought to identify best practices for production in the region, including the variety and planting date evaluations described in this publication.
Quinoa crop management
Field preparation should allow for shallow planting of one-quarter inch in a fine seedbed; quinoa planted too deeply will result in poor emergence. Most commercial production favors row spacing between 12 and 18 inches with dense within-row spacing sometimes as close as 1 inch between plants! The tight in-row spacing forces a single main stem, limits secondary seed heads and helps bring the crop to maturity faster. Quinoa planted at lower densities has more branching and multiple seed heads with a wider variability of seed maturation dates.
Nutrient recommendations are wide-ranging. Weed competition trials under greenhouse settings suggest that quinoa is strongly competitive, scavenging nitrogen adequately for growth when weed species are present at both high and low nitrogen fertility rates. Therefore, lower rates of nitrogen (between 50 and 100 pounds of nitrogen per acre), are likely to be sufficient, depending on soil reserves.
Quinoa varieties can take 100–120 days to reach full maturity, so planting early in the spring seems advantageous. However, there are two potential considerations. First, quinoa generally does not thrive with excessive soil moisture. Fields with standing water from spring rains should be planted later. Second, weed control will be more challenging with an early planting date. In favorable conditions, quinoa usually germinates and emerges within a week of planting. After the first true leaves emerge, the quinoa plant canopy growth slows for two or more weeks while the root system develops. This slow canopy growth allows early-season weeds to gain an advantage. In Oregon, early spring is often too wet to allow for frequent field access for weed cultivation. All of these conditions can lead to the “perfect storm” of weeds.
In our research trials in 2018, a quinoa crop planted on March 31 required significantly more hand weeding (estimated at 166 hours per acre compared with 41 hours per acre with May and June planting dates) than the other planting dates. Weed pressure decreased greatly with each later planting date. This is likely due to the faster growth rate of quinoa with warmer temperatures, which allows quinoa to outcompete weeds and provides an opportunity to terminate the first flush of weeds prior to planting quinoa. Similar results were noted in 2019; however, primary weeding was accomplished with tractor-mounted cultivation equipment and therefore time to cultivate was not recorded.
As this discussion around mechanical weed control suggests, there currently are no selective herbicides labeled for use in quinoa production. Several are under review through the national IR-4 Specialty Crops Program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, but for now mechanical cultivation and possibly hand-weeding is almost assured. Good seedbed preparation to decrease weed emergence is critical for crop establishment.
Quinoa seed is mature when it is hard. An easy way to test is by pressing with fingers. Although the seeds are mature, the plants may still be upright with considerable moisture in the stems and leaves.
This slow process of plant die-back, or senescence, makes harvesting before winter rains difficult. But harvesting before any fall rain is crucial because mature quinoa seed that remains in the field during rain events will sprout, ruining the crop (Figure 3).
As a result, most commercial operations are using common seed production techniques for crop dry-down in order to harvest quinoa before rain arrives. In Western Oregon, growers swath the field to terminate the crop terminate the crop and allow the seeds to finish hardening in the heads. Swathing the field also accelerates drying of the stems and leaves to aid in harvest with a combine. In late August, a swathed field can dry within a week. Swathing and drying in the field has drawbacks, however; the process results in seed shatter that may cause a significant loss of yield and a source of volunteers in the next crop. Research is needed to determine optimum moisture content for combining. Work to develop approved desiccants needs to be a priority so growers can directly combine the crop. Smaller-scale growers have harvested by hand, cutting and drying on tarps, then threshing.
Seed cleaning
Both mechanical and hand-harvested seeds require additional steps after harvest to remove chaff and saponins. Raw seeds are inedible because of the astringency of saponins in the seed coat. Commercial seed-cleaning equipment can be modified for the small seed size and to include a cleaning step to remove saponins.
Currently, the nearest large-scale processors for Oregon farms are in Idaho and California, requiring long-distance shipping at high costs. Recent work has begun to develop seed-processing capacity in the Willamette Valley. Smaller-scale producers — those mostly producing quinoa as a seed crop — have been successful with the first step of processing. That first step includes separating chaff by using fans or even by vacuuming seed heads with a clean high-speed industrial vacuum with an extra-long hose attachment. The vacuum pressure moves the seeds along the tube, which provides light abrasion as the seed travels the length of the tube. However, additional processing for saponin removal remains a problem for food crops and large-scale production.
Variety and planting date trial in the Willamette Valley
Because temperature during flowering is one of the biggest factors influencing yield, research in 2018 and 2019 compared the yield of several varieties across multiple planting dates. Planting dates were based on seasonal conditions. The first planting date immediately followed spring soil drying. Three additional planting dates were spaced out every three to four weeks for a total of four planting dates in each year.
The quinoa trials were conducted in a half-acre field at the OSU North Willamette Research and Extension Center in Aurora, Oregon. The plots included 10 quinoa varieties (Table 1) in 2018 and 17 varieties in 2019, planted on four different dates (Table 2). Each year the seed was purchased or obtained from four sources: Wild Garden Seed (Philomath, Oregon), Adaptive Seed (Sweet Home, Oregon), Washington State University (Pullman, Washington) and Oregon State University (Corvallis, Oregon). Some of the varieties used in the trials are not currently commercially available. Each variety was seeded at a rate of 7.9 pounds per acre in plots that were 15 feet long and three rows wide with 18-inch spacing between rows. Each planting date had four replicates of each variety.
2018 |
2019 |
||
---|---|---|---|
Varieties |
Seed provided by: |
Varieties |
Seed provided by: |
Oro de Valle | OSU | Oro de Valle | OSU |
Kaslaea | WSU | Kaslaea | WSU |
Titicaca | WSU | Titicaca | WSU |
Puno | WSU | Puno | WSU |
QQ74 | WSU | QQ74 | WSU |
Cherry Vanilla | Wild Garden Seed | Cherry Vanilla | Wild Garden Seed |
Ivory | Wild Garden Seed | Ivory | Wild Garden Seed |
Mint Vanilla | Wild Garden Seed | Mint Vanilla | Wild Garden Seed |
Red Head | Wild Garden Seed | Red Head | Wild Garden Seed |
Bio Bio | Wild Garden Seed | Bio Bio | Wild Garden Seed |
Kasala Multicolor | Wild Garden Seed | ||
Cocoa Cherry | Wild Garden Seed | ||
Peppermint | Wild Garden Seed | ||
Buffy | Wild Garden Seed | ||
Chadmo | Adaptive Seeds | ||
Dave 407 | Adaptive Seeds | ||
Linares | Adaptive Seeds |
2018 |
2019 |
||
---|---|---|---|
Planting date |
Flowering period |
Planting date |
Flowering period |
March 31 | Late June | March 22 | Mid-late June |
April 24 | Mid-July | April 18 | Early July |
May 18 | Late July | May 16 | Late July |
June 14 | August | June 4 | Late July–early August |
Quinoa was planted monthly beginning mid-March each year. The second, third and fourth planting dates were in mid-April, mid-May and mid-June, respectively. Plants were observed throughout both growing seasons to assess flowering and seed head development. Plots were maintained by a combination of hand-weeding and mechanical cultivation, and were irrigated every 7–10 days through the soft-dough stage of seed development, generally at a rate near the reference evapotranspiration rate as monitored by AgriMet weather equipment. Previous studies show irrigation is effective in maintaining yields in critical crop development phases and in years with little rainfall.
Seed was harvested beginning in late July 2018 and mid-August 2019. Plants in each plot were harvested by hand and dried. In 2018, seed heads were stripped off of quinoa stalks and run through a small plot combine to separate seeds from chaff. In 2019, seed were removed from chaff manually (see “Seed cleaning”).
Yield
Achieving consistent yields in quinoa production has been the biggest challenge for growers. Some regions like the Salt Lake Valley of Utah attribute low yields to hot summer temperatures (above 95° F) during flowering and seed set. Regions like western Oregon struggle with insect pests that feed on developing seeds (Figure 5).
Large commercial operations have reported acceptable yields should be above 2,000 pounds per acre. The timing of planting and harvest can greatly impact both crop development and seasonal peak pest populations.
In 2018, abundant lygus bug populations decreased yield in all plots. Visual inspection of seeds showed approximately 95% of the seed on the quinoa panicles was damaged and likely not viable.
Red Head, Ivory and Kaslaea varieties had the largest seed yield, and the earliest planting date had the greatest yield of the four dates.
In 2019, seed set was much improved with experimental insecticidal controls, and grain was harvested from each planting date successfully. The earliest planting date again had the highest yield (Figure 6).
Figure 6 shows yields in 2019 at each planting date for two of the most commonly reported varieties throughout the U.S. Similar to 2018, early planting dates had greatest yields. Later plantings were cut and removed from the field before full seed development due to impending rains and this resulted in much lower yields. Late-season rain will often cause quinoa seeds to sprout in the head if left in the field, completely ruining yields (Figure 3). It is critical that quinoa mature and be removed from the field before fall rains begin.
Because of the significant yield reductions due to insect damage in 2018, we planned a small lygus trap-cropping study in 2019. The study evaluated the effects of perimeter planting with potential trap crops on the lygus observed on quinoa plants (Figure 7).
In this smaller study, we planted small areas of Oro de Valle bordered by one of four trap crops: lacey phacelia, sorghum-sudan grass, buckwheat or none (an untreated weedy control plot). Over three sample dates, we evaluated the incidence of lygus both within the trap crop and on quinoa.
Results showed a strong preference of adult lygus for phacelia in the middle of the season, during phacelia flowering, with quinoa and buckwheat also hosting adults (Figure 8). Quinoa and lacey phacelia had the highest numbers of lygus immatures of the crops planted. Further exploration of this interaction is needed to refine systems for use at field scale.
Conclusion
Quinoa has the potential to fill some crop rotation needs for novel crops in annual cropping systems, such as vegetable or seed production. Careful planning of weed and pest control should take place prior to field selection. Planting as early as a stale seedbed can be made in the spring seems like the best practice to maximize yield and mitigate the risk of rains starting before harvest. Seed cleaning and market opportunities need to be developed further to minimize hauling costs to existing facilities in neighboring states.
References
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