AQUINON
Corn
OOO 'Miratorg-Kursk'User rating
0 votesAbout product
Description
The AQUINON hybrid is characterized by resistance to helminthosporiosis and lodging, as well as cold, heat, and drought tolerance. The corn ear contains 14-16 rows of kernels and reaches a length of 18-20 cm. The sum of active temperatures for flowering is 860 degrees Celsius, for silage maturity — 1480-1500, and for grain — 1690. The recommended seeding rate is 100-105 thousand seeds per hectare for silage and 95 thousand seeds per hectare for grain.
AQUINON belongs to the fodder crop category and is intended for feed use. The variety is registered and approved for use in various regions, including Voronezh, Kursk, Lipetsk, Oryol, and Tambov Oblasts. The development of this variety was carried out by LLC 'Miratorg-Kursk', confirming its quality and adaptation to Central Russian conditions.
Specifications hover over for a hint about the specification
| Hybrid Type | |
|---|---|
|
Use Direction
Use Direction
Dual-purpose hybrids: for silage and grain in all growing regions. These are "stay-green" type hybrids, meaning the plants remain green for a longer period. However, this does not affect the sugar, cellulose, and hemicellulose content, nor the degree of lignification of the plant... |
|
|
Recommended Density
Recommended Density
Optimal productivity is achieved at a planting density of 4000-5500 plants/ha. Possible planting scheme: 300-500x40-80 cm. |
100-105 thousand pcs/ha, 95-100 thousand pcs/ha |
| Catalog | Catalog → Corn |
| Manufacturer | OOO 'Miratorg-Kursk' |
| Country | Russia |
Store offers
Prices are updated on loadAggregator catalog: prices are collected automatically from store websites, normalized by AI and converted at the current exchange rate. Before ordering, confirm the price and availability on the store's website. This block is not indexed by search engines — the data is loaded after the page opens.
See also
Often considered together with this variety
Recently viewed
Similar items in this catalog section























Comments · 0