Link to CNN archives The Chat 'n Chew Cafe KingCorn.org, The Corn Growers' Guidebook Purdue Agronomy Extension home page Purdue Agronomy Department Purdue University
If you would like to receive Corny News Network articles and other corny information by email, contact .
Other Corny News Network articles can be viewed at the CNN Archives.
Published 14 June 2004

Water, Water Everywhere...

URL: http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.04/Flooding-0614.html
PDF version
R.L. (Bob) Nielsen
Agronomy Dept., Purdue Univ.
West Lafayette, IN 47907-2054
Email address:
 
Click on image to open a larger version.

he rain storms of the past week left a lot of things floating or submerged throughout Indiana, including corn fields. Total rainfall over the several day period was greater than 10 inches for some areas in northern Indiana. The consequences of such extreme weather events on crops this late into the growing season are often severe, with few available remedies to recover lost yield potential. Here are a few thoughts to consider relative to water-damaged crops.

  1. Given the warm soil temperatures, young corn will not tolerate more than several days of outright ponding before whole plant death occurs. Oxygen deprivation quickly results in significant deterioration and death of above- and below-ground plant tissue. See my earlier article for more info (Nielsen, 2004a).
  2. Older plants will technically tolerate ponding or saturated soil conditions somewhat longer than young corn before death occurs. Crops that survive bouts of ponding and saturated soils will nonetheless suffer significant damage to their root systems. The immediate effects will be stunting of plant development. In the longer term, root systems compromised by ponding and saturated soils today will be less able to sustain the crops IF drought conditions develop later in the growing season.
  3. For corn, damage to its root system today will predispose the crop to the development of root and stalk rots later in the season by virtue of the photosynthetic stress imposed by the limited root system during the important grain filling period following pollination. Monitor affected fields later in August for the possible development of stalk rots and modify harvest-timing strategies accordingly (Nielsen, 2003).
  4. Ponding or flooding over the top of young corn plants increases the risk of infection by the soil borne fungus, Sclerophthora macrospora, that causes Crazy Top disease (Lipps and Mills, 2000).
  5. Once the water recedes, deposits of sediment and crop residues that remain on crop plants either outright smother any surviving plants or greatly reduce their ability to capture sunlight and photosynthesize carbohydrates. Ironically, more rain later on may be beneficial to help wash off these deposits.
  6. Given the warm soils, loss of nitrate nitrogen due to denitrification can easily approach 4 to 5% per day of saturated soil conditions (Hoeft, 2004). Loss of nitrate nitrogen on coarse-textured, sandy soils is also very rapid. Pre-plant or early side-dress applications are at most risk. More recent sidedress applications of nitrate-containing fertilizers (e.g., liquid 28%) are at more risk of N loss than are applications of anhydrous ammonia (Nielsen, 2004b).
  7. Many cornfields in the affected area are "smack dab" (a Nielsen term, meaning "exactly") in the middle of their rapid growth phase prior to pollination when nitrogen uptake rates are at their peak. Assessing the need for supplemental nitrogen is complicated by the fact that the yield potential of (surviving) ponded corn will be less than normal. Where estimated nitrogen loss is significant (60 lbs or greater) in fields not yet tasseling and yield potential is still reasonable, corn may respond to an additional 50 – 80 lbs of applied fertilizer N up to or shortly after tasseling (Hoeft, 2004).
  8. Replant considerations for damaged or destroyed corn fields will not be easy decisions, particularly in the northern half of Indiana, given that many damaged fields will not be dry enough to replant for another week. Technically, corn could still be replanted in northern Indiana through the end of June by selecting unusually early maturity hybrids (Table 1). However, such late replanting is not without risk itself, including the fact that unusually early maturity hybrids are often unadapted to diseases common to an area of the state (Nielsen & Thomison, 2003).
Table 1. Relative hybrid maturities "safe" for replanting in late June throughout Indiana.
Area of Indiana
Replanting June 21
Replanting June 28
Northwest
96
92
Northcentral
95
91
Northeast
94
90
Westcentral
104
100
Central
102
98
Eastcentral
96
92
Southwest
117
112
Southcentral
108
104
Southeast
109
105
Listed hybrid maturity values aim at reaching maturity (kernel black layer) about 1 week prior to the date of an average fall frost for a given area of the state.

Related References

Hoeft, Robert. 2004. Predicting and Measuring Nitrogen Loss. Univ. of Illinois "the Bulletin". Available online at http://www.ipm.uiuc.edu/bulletin/article.php?issueNumber=10&issueYear=2004&articleNumber=8 (URL verified 6/14/04).

Lipps, Patrick E. and Dennis R. Mills. 2000. Crazy Top of Corn. Ohio State Univ. Coop. Ext. Service publication AC-0034-01. Available online at http://ohioline.osu.edu/ac-fact/0034.html. (URL verified 6/14/04)

Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2003. Stalk Health Issues in Stressed Corn . Corny News Network, Purdue Univ. Available online at http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.03/StalkHealth-0813.html. (URL verified 6/14/04)

Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2004a. Effects of Flooding or Ponding on Young Corn. Corny News Network, Purdue Univ. Available online at http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.04/Flooding-0507.html. (URL verified 6/14/04)

Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2004b. Soggy Soils, N Loss, & Supplemental Nitrogen Fertilizer for Corn. Corny News Network, Purdue Univ. Available online at http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.04/Flooding-0507.html. (URL verified 6/14/04)

Nielsen, R.L. (Bob) and Peter Thomison. 2003. Delayed Planting & Hybrid Maturity Decisions. Purdue Univ. Cooperative Extension Publication AY-312-W. Available online at http://www.agry.purdue.edu/ext/pubs/AY-312-W.pdf. (URL verified 6/14/04).

 


For other Corny News Network articles, browse through the CNN Archives at http://www.kingcorn.org/news/archive.html.

For other information about corn, take a look at the Corn Growers' Guidebook at http://www.kingcorn.org.

©2004, Purdue University, all rights reserved. It is the policy of the Purdue Agronomy Department that all persons shall have equal opportunity and access to its programs and facilities without regard to race, color, sex, religion, national origin, age, or disability. Purdue University is an Affirmative Action employer. This material may be available in alternative formats.
End of document