The 2026 growing guide for sunflowers is now available
Terres Inovia has updated its sunflower growing guide. This comprehensive guide, updated with the institute's new visual identity, will accompany growers and advisors step-by-step through the coming campaign. As in previous years, it can be downloaded free of charge from the Terres Inovia website, or ordered in printed form.
Terres Inovia a mis à jour son guide de culture consacré au tournesol. Ce support complet, actualisé avec la nouvelle identité visuelle de l’institut, accompagnera pas-à-pas les producteurs et les conseillers lors de la prochaine campagne. Comme chaque année, il est téléchargeable gratuitement sur le site internet de Terres Inovia et peut également être commandé en version imprimée.
Économe en intrants et bénéficiant d’un progrès génétique continu, le tournesol est une culture durable et compétitive, pourvoyeuse de bénéfices pour les systèmes de culture dans lesquels il est inclus. Tête de rotation à cycle court, doté d’une bonne capacité de tolérance au stress hydrique, il s’adapte à de nombreux contextes de production.
Le guide de culture tournesol de Terres Inovia permet de tout savoir sur l’itinéraire technique du tournesol : choix variétal, implantation, stratégie de lutte contre les bioagresseurs, conservation des graines, etc.
Dans cette édition 2026, Terres Inovia a actualisé l’ensemble de ses conseils et positions techniques, à l’instar des recommandations pour lutter contre le mildiou, les caractéristiques réglementaires des solutions préconisées, ou encore la liste des variétés évaluées dans le réseau Terres Inovia. Quant aux références économiques présentées, elles sont en phase avec les éléments de contexte actuel.
Le guide en version imprimée est également gratuit, seule une participation aux frais de port est demandée. Le guide de culture tournesol 2026 sera livré à partir du 23 février 2026.
Nos autres actualités
North & East zone - Sunflower crop report 2025
Camelina: choice of plot for summer catch crop
To maximize the chances of success for camelina as a summer catch crop, it's essential to think in terms of crop succession. Camelina should therefore be planted as soon as the main crop is planted.
To maximize the chances of success for camelina as a summer catch crop, it's essential to think in terms of crop succession. Camelina should therefore be planted as soon as the main crop is planted.
Selection criteria
- Main crop harvested early (winter barley, winter peas, etc.)
- Choose legumes to avoid fertilization
- Avoid plots with a spring herbicide program at risk
- Choose plots free of weeds
After which main crop?
The first criterion is to choose an early-harvested preceding crop, enabling camelina to be planted between June 20 and July 10, to guarantee a harvest before the end of October. The main candidate crops are winter peas and winter barley, but other early-harvested crops may also be suitable: canning peas, garlic, onions, etc.
The map below illustrates the importance of sowing early, showing the date at which maturity is reached for very short-cycle varieties according to different emergence dates. For example, for an emergence on July 1, camelina reaches maturity before October 10 throughout France, whereas for an emergence on July 8, it reaches maturity after October 10 in the northern part of France, and for an emergence on July 15, it reaches maturity after October 20 in almost the northern half of France.
Planting camelina after a legume (e.g. winter peas) is particularly interesting, as it allows you to limit or even do without nitrogen fertilization, thus reducing the ITK's operating costs.
Focus on main crop herbicide program
Camelina grown as a summer catch crop is sensitive to the persistence of certain herbicides, mainly those in group 2(ALS1 inhibitors) with herbicides from the sulfonylurea family such as metsulfuron, mesosulfuron, etc., as well as imazamox (applied to winter peas). It also appears to be sensitive to group 14 herbicides (PPO2 inhibitors such as bifenox) and group 32 herbicides (solanesyl diphosphate synthase inhibitors, includingaclonifen, applied to winter peas).
There is therefore a risk of phytotoxicity (leaf discoloration, foot loss, etc.) for camelina when these herbicides are applied in spring to the main crop, a risk that is all the greater in dry conditions, when applied late and when there is little or no tillage between the harvest of the main crop and the planting of camelina. Despite this, the effects of these herbicides can vary according to a number of factors (rainfall, soil type, tillage, date and dose of application, etc.) and are still poorly understood and quantified.
Weed pressure on the plot
Camelina is a well-established crop that competes well with weeds. In spite of this, weed pressure remains one of the main limiting factors for camelina as a summer catch crop, so it's vital to use every possible means to manage weeds effectively.
We recommend choosing a weed-free plot at sowing time. If weeds are present when the main crop is harvested and you wish to direct seed, a glyphosate pass may be useful to manage weeds before seeding.
1ALS: acetolactate synthase
2PPO: protoporphyrinogen oxidase
Camelina editions
Our other articles
Keys to success with camelina in catch crops
Louis-Marie Allard, Terres Inovia development engineer for the North and East zone, explains the basics of successful summer cover crops with camelina.
Louis-Marie Allard, Terres Inovia development engineer for the North and East zone, explains the basics of successful summer cover crops with camelina.