The images below come from a field planted in mid-April in westcentral Indiana. Emergence and initial appearance of the young plants were reported to be quite uniform.
By late May to early June, however, what had been uniform had turned ugly. Plant health ranged from good to death. Plant colors ranged from a nice green to pale yellow to necrotic. Plant size ranged from zero (dead) to six inches (stunted) to 18 inches (healthy) in height. Leaf stage ranged from zero (dead) to V2 (stunted) to V4 (healthy).
Inspection of stunted or dead plants revealed a number of contributing stress factors. The most common factors appeared to be the destruction of the seed by seed rots or a seedling blight affecting the mesocotyls. The randomness of the affected areas attests to the randomness of the occurrence of disease organisms throughout the soil.
What is important to recognize is that the damage to the seed and/or mesocotyls occurred while the seedling was still strongly dependent on the seed for nourishment, sometime before about leaf stage V2. Loss of the seed and/or the mesocotyl, the 'pipeline' from the seed to the above-ground photosynthetic 'factory', at such an early developmental stage resulted in the severe stunting and/or death of the seedlings. The risk of such damage to corn is greater whenever the corn is developing at a very slow pace such as was experienced throughout Indiana in late April and early May of 2000.
For more information about seedling diseases of corn, browse through these recent newsletter articles from around the Midwest.