'Foxtail millet' (botanic name '''Setaria italica''') is the second most widely planted species of
millet, and the most important in
East Asia. It has the longest history of cultivation among the millets, having been grown in
China since sometime in the
sixth millennium BC. Other names for foxtail millet include 'Italian millet', 'German millet', 'Chinese millet', and 'Hungarian millet'.
Foxtail millet is an
annual grass with slim, vertical, leafy stems which can reach a height of 120-200 cm (4-7 feet.) The seedhead is a dense, hairy
panicle 5-30 cm (2-12 in.) long. The small seeds, around 2 mm (less htan 1/8 in.) in diameter, are encased in a thin, papery hull which is easily removed in
threshing. Seed color varies greatly between varieties.
Common names for Foxtail millet
★ In India: Tinai(Tamil), Korralu (Telugu), Navane (Kannada)
Cultivation

Foxtail millet
In China, foxtail millet is the most common millet and one of the main food crops, especially among the poor in the dry northern part of that country. In
Europe and
North America it is planted at a moderate scale for hay and silage, and to a more limited extent for
birdseed.
It is a warm season crop, typically planted in late spring. Harvest for
hay or
silage can be made in 65-70 days (typical yield is 15,000-20,000 kg/ha of green matter or 3,000-4,000 kg/ha of hay), and for
grain in 75-90 days (typical yield is 800-900 kg/ha of grain). Its early maturity and efficient use of available water make it suitable for raising in dry areas.
Diseases of foxtail millet include leaf and head blast disease caused by ''
Magnaporthe grisea'',
smut disease caused by ''
Ustilago crameri'', and green ear caused by ''
Sclerospora graminicola''. The unharvested crop is also susceptible to attack by
birds and
rodents.
History and domestication
The wild antecedent of foxtail millet has been securely identified as ''
Setaria viridis'', which is interfertile with foxtail millet; wild or weedy forms of foxtail millet also exist. Zohary and Hopf note that the primary difference between the wild and cultivated forms is "their seed dispersal biology. Wild and weedy forms shatter their seed while the cultivars retain them."
[1] The earliest evidence of the cultivation of this grain comes from the
Peiligang culture of China, which also cultivated the
common millet, but foxtail millet became the predominant grain only with the
Yangshao culture.
[2]
Foxtail millet arrived in Europe later; carbonized seeds first appear in the
second millennium BC in central Europe. The earliest definite evidence for its cultivation in the Near East is at the
Iron Age levels at
Tille Hoyuk in
Turkey, with an uncorrected
radiocarbon date of about
600 BC.
[3]
Notes
1. Daniel Zohary and Maria Hopf, ''Domestication of plants in the Old World'', third edition (Oxford: University Press, 2000), p. 86
2. Zohary and Hopf, ''Domestication'', p. 87
3. Zohary and Hopf, ''Domestication'', p. 88
External links
★
Alternative Field Crops Manual: Millets