Spinacia Oleracea: Spinach
Spinacia Oleracea: Spinach
Spinacia Oleracea: Spinach
Spinacia oleracea
Classification
• English Name:
Spinach
• Botanical Name:
Spinacia oleracea
• Family:
Chenopodiaceae
Origin
• Spinach is thought to have originated in
ancient Persia (modern Iran and neighboring
countries).
• Arab traders carried spinach into India, and
then the plant was introduced into ancient
China, where it was known as "Persian
vegetable“ .
• The earliest available record of the spinach
plant was recorded in Chinese, stating it was
introduced into China via Nepal.
Area and production in the World
• Spacing:
– R-R distance 25 cm.
– B-B distance 60-75 cm.
– P-P distance 12-15 cm.
Fertilizer Requirement
• Spinach requires a high level of fertility, especially nitrogen.
• Early spring spinach may require larger quantities of fertilizer
than fall crops.
• Per acre requirements on sands and sandy loams are
40 to 80 kg N
35 to 40 kg P2O5
40 to 60 kg K2O.
On heavier clay soils, 25 kg/acre of each nutrient should be
adequate.
• Fertilizer is often broadcast and worked into the soil prior to
seeding.
• If the fertilizer is banded at seeding, it should be placed along
each side of the rows 2 to 3 inches below the level of the seed .
Weed Control
• A healthy, vigorous crop provides substantial
competition that suppresses weed growth and
acts as part of the weed control programme.
• Therefore, proper fertilization, irrigation, and
insect and disease control measures promote
good crop growth and compliment other weed
control measures.
• Hand hoeing can be used at small scale but
proper weedicides should be used at
commercial scale production.
Marketing and storage
• Spinach is sold loose, in pre-packaged bags, or
frozen.
• Fresh spinach loses much of its nutritional value
with storage of more than a few days.
• While refrigeration slows this effect to about
eight days, spinach will lose most of its folate and
carotenoid content, so for longer storage it is
frozen, cooked and frozen, or canned.
• Storage in the freezer can be for up to eight
months.
Harvesting
• The crop is ready for cutting with in six to
eight weeks after sowing.
• The cutting is done 2cm above the ground
level when plants have put five to six leaves.
• New foliage is cut later with three to four
cuttings.
• Yield:
• 8000 kg per acre.
Varieties
• Desi and Candiari
• Local Sindhi
• Prickly heat
Health Benefits
• Spinach is reported to have anti aging properties, anti-cancer
effects, reducing the risk of cardiac disorders, muscular
degeneration and vision-related discrepancies.
• It helps regulating blood pressure and cerebral health.
• It is also reported to improve the brain functioning.
• It proves to be an efficient remedy for constipation, anemia,
acidosis, night blindness, tooth and respiratory disorders.
• It smoothes the functioning of digestive system.
• Presence of vitamin A aids in combating night blindness.
• Calcium contents of spinach help to strengthen the bones
especially teeth.
• It efficiently reduces the respiration related problems and
diseases like tuberculosis, bronchitis, asthma and cough.
Spinach Disease