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agridat (version 1.8.1)

minnesota.barley.yield: Yields of barley at 6 sites in Minnesota 1927-1936.

Description

This is an expanded version of the barley data that is often used to illustrate dot plots.

Arguments

source

H V Harlan and P R Cowan and Lucille Reinbach. (1935). Yields of barley varieties in the United States and Canada, 1927-1931. United States Dept of Agriculture. http://naldc.nal.usda.gov/download/CAT86200440/PDF. Gustav A. Wiebe, Philip Russell Cowan, Lucille Reinbach-Welch. (1940). Yields of barley varieties in the United States and Canada, 1932-36. United States Dept of Agriculture. http://books.google.com/books?id=OUfxLocnpKkC&pg=PA19.

Details

The lattice package contains a smaller version of this data for the years 1931 and 1932. The following comments are in reference to the mentioned source documents. Notes about Immer (1934). The University Farm location is at the city of Saint Paul. This source provides the yield data for each of the three blocks at each location in 1931 and 1932. The following registration numbers and names are given: ll{ C.I. number Variety name Minn 184 Manchuria Minn 445 Glabron Minn 440 Svansota Minn 447 Velvet Minn 448 Trebi Minn 457 Manchuria x Smooth Awn Minn 462 Smooth Awn x Manchuria Minn 452 Peatland Minn 475 Svanhals x Lion Minn 529 Wisconsin No 38 } Notes about Harlan (1935): The 1931 yields match the average values of Immer (1934). The Minnesota 474 and 475 cultivars are both 'Svanhals x Lion' crosses. No yields are reported at Crookston in 1928 because of a crop failure. (Page 20) Also, in the report for North Dakota it says "the zero yields at Williston, ND in 1931 were caused by drought". (Page 31) Notes about Wiebe (1940): The 1932 data generally match the average values from Immer (1934) with the following notes. The data for Glabron at St Paul in 1932 are missing, but given as 36.8 in Immer (1934). This value is treated as missing in this R dataset. The data for Svansota at Morris in 1932 are missing, but given as 35.0 in Immer (1934). This value is treated as missing in this R dataset. The yield for 'Wisconsin 38' at St Paul in 1932 is shown as 3.80, but 38 in Immer (1934). The latter value is used in this R dataset. The yields for No475 in 1932 are not reported in Wiebe (1940), but are reported in Immer (1934). No yields are reported at Morris in 1933 and 1934, because of a crop failure owing to drought. Notes about Hayes (1942). This sources gives the block-level yield data for 5 cultivars at 4 sites in 1932 and 1935. Cultivar 'Barbless' is the same as 'Wisconsin No38'.

References

Immer, R. F. and H. K. Hayes and LeRoy Powers. (1934). Statistical Determination of Barley Varietal Adaptation. Journal of the American Society of Agronomy, 26, 403-419. Hayes, H.K. and Immer, F.R. (1942). Methods of plant breeding. McGraw Hill. Kevin Wright. (2013). Revisiting Immer's Barley Data. The American Statistitician, 67, 129-133. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00031305.2013.801783.

Examples

Run this code
dat <- minnesota.barley.yield
dat$yr <- factor(dat$year)

# Drop Dryland, Jeans, CompCross, MechMixture because they have less than 5
# year-loc values
dat <- droplevels(subset(dat, !is.element(gen, c("CompCross","Dryland","Jeans","MechMixture"))))

# 1934 has huge swings from one loc to the next
dotplot(gen~yield|site, dat, groups=yr,
        auto.key=list(columns=5), scales=list(y=list(cex=.5)))

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