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Published 22 May 2005
Singin’ From The Same Sheet of Replant Music
ermination
and stand establishment for mid-April planted corn in parts of Indiana and Ohio
have been stressed beyond their limits this year as a result of cold temperatures,
imbibitional chilling injury, excessive rainfall, saturated soils, dense surface
crusting, and seedling diseases during the first four weeks after planting.
Stand establishment problems have been particularly common for corn planted
4 to 5 days prior to the onset of the cold snap and heavy rains of late April.
Consequently, estimates of the number of replanted acres are higher than normal
and perhaps greater than any year in recent history.
Typically, the greatest challenge in making a replant decision is assessing
the health and survival of the original stand of corn. Unfortunately, as in
most years, some percentage of replanted fields will not return an economic
gain to the grower because the replant “trigger” was pulled on the basis of
emotion, peer pressure, or misinformation. The following points are intended
to make sure everyone is “singing from the same sheet of music” when it comes
to assessing troublesome stands of corn.
- Fields of otherwise healthy looking corn should not be replanted simply
because of injury to the plants’ seminal (also called embryonic) root systems.
- Having said this, it is true that assessing the true health of plants
in some fields has been difficult at best. Growers have often been uncertain
whether they are dealing with 20,000 healthy plants (and thus likely not
economical to replant in mid-May) or 20,000 “wanna-be” “half-hearted”
“weak-kneed” and otherwise less than vigorous plants that will never regain
their potential glory to produce maximum sized ears. The adage “patience
is a virtue” is very applicable to the need for growers to allow damaged
stands time to demonstrate their ability to recover or not.
- Every field needs to be judged on its own merits (or demerits).
- It is particularly irresponsible this planting season to be handing
out blanket recommendations on replanting based on observations (or hearsay)
from other fields, perhaps with totally different scenarios. Fields that
initially looked equally troublesome during emergence have often become
polar opposites in terms of their eventual stand establishment.
- The nutrient reserves in the kernel endosperm can completely sustain a young
corn seedling from germination through about leaf stage V1 (one visible leaf
collar) or V2 (Hochholdinger et al., 2004).
- Consequently, prior to development of post-embryonic nodal roots from
the crown area of the plant, good health of the kernel and mesocotyl is
paramount for seedling survival and vigor.
- A healthy kernel and mesocotyl can enable a seedling with damaged
embryonic roots to survive until nodal roots begin developing from
the crown area.
- Significant disease development in the kernel and/or mesocotyl prior
to nodal root development is usually considered to be the proverbial “kiss
of death” for young seedlings.
- The same prognosis holds true for severe insect injury (wireworms,
seedcorn maggots, white grubs) or any other stress that damages the
kernel or mesocotyl prior to nodal root development.
- The importance of kernel and mesocotyl health to plant survival slowly
diminishes as successive sets of nodal roots form from the crown of the
plant (see below).
- Health of the radicle and lateral seminal roots (aka embryonic roots) prior
to nodal root development is desirable, but is not as critical for the survival
of young seedlings as is the health of the kernel and mesocotyl.
- Injury or death of embryonic roots due to fungal diseases is obviously
not desirable, but does not impose a death penalty on the seedlings.
- A return to cold and wet soil conditions, coupled with cloudy days
not conducive for plant photosynthesis, would indeed favor the continued
development of these seedling diseases and perhaps eventual seedling
death or severe plant stunting.
- Conversely, warmer and drier soils, coupled with plenty of sunshine
for plant photosynthesis, would favor rapid corn root development
plus would slow the progress of the disease organisms.
- Loss of the radicle root, in and of itself, has no direct bearing on
subsequent development or morphology of the corn plant.
- Post-embryonic nodal roots begin to elongate from the first stalk node in
the crown area of plants shortly after leaf stage V1 and are usually distinctly
visible by V2.
- Individual “rings” of nodal roots will continue to develop from subsequent
stalk nodes over time, approximately at the same pace as the emergence
of leaf collars, up to the 7th or 8th stalk node.
- By the time a plant reaches approximately V4 (four visible leaf collars),
three “rings” of nodal roots should be visible at the crown of the plants.
Such plants are essentially independent from any further sustenance that
the kernel may yet be able to furnish.
- While nodal root initiation usually does not occur beyond the 7th
or 8th stalk nodes, lateral branching and dry matter accumulation
of existing nodal roots continues throughout the growing season, although
at an ever-decreasing rate once pollination occurs.
- The primary (harvestable) ear in corn is not initiated until approximately
V5 (five visible leaf collars). Consequently, stress prior to V5 has no direct
effect on ear size determination unless its eventual outcome is a severely
stunted plant. The main consequence of stress from planting through the early
leaf stages is the potential loss in effective plant population, one of several
components that determine final grain yield.
Related References
Hochholdinger, Frank, Katrin Woll, Michaela Sauer, and Diana
Dembinsky. 2004. Genetic Dissection of Root Formation in Maize (Zea mays)
Reveals Root-type Specific Developmental Programmes. Annals of Botany 93:
359-368.
Lipps, Patrick. 2005. Assessing Corn Seedling Emergence and
Seedling Diseases. Crop Observation Reporting Network, Ohio State Univ.
Available online at
http://corn.osu.edu/story.php?setissueID=82&storyID=453 [URL verified
5/19/05].
Lipps, Patrick and Peter Thomison. 2005. Corn Emergence Problems
and Replant Decisions. Crop Observation Reporting Network, Ohio State Univ.
Available online at http://corn.osu.edu/story.php?setissueID=83&storyID=461[URL
verified 5/19/05].
Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2003. Estimating Yield and Dollar
Returns from Corn Replanting. Purdue Univ. Cooperative Ext. Service Publication
AY-264-W. Available online at
http://www.agry.purdue.edu/ext/pubs/AY-264-W.pdf [URL verified 4/28/05].
Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2004a. Germination Events in Corn.
Corny News Network. Purdue Univ. Available online at
http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.04/Germination-0502.html[URL verified
5/19/05].
Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2004b. The Emergence Process in Corn.
Corny News Network. Purdue Univ. Available online at
http://www.agry.purdue.edu/ext/corn/news/articles.04/Emerge-0502.html[URL
verified 5/19/05].
Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2004c. The Roots of the Matter.
Corny News Network. Purdue Univ. Available online at http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.04/Roots-0511.html
[URL verified 5/19/05].
Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2005a. I’ve Got The Corny Stand Establishment
Blues…. Corny News Network, Purdue Univ. Available online at http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.05/StandEstablishment-0503.html[URL
verified 5/8/05].
Nielsen, R.L. (Bob). 2005b. Stress Continues for Corn Growing
Under Refrigerated Conditions. Corny News Network, Purdue Univ. Available
online at http://www.kingcorn.org/news/articles.05/RefrigCorn-0429.html
[URL verified 5/3/05].
Thomison, Peter. 2005. Check Corn Fields for Emergence Problems.
Crop Observation Reporting Network, Ohio State Univ. Available online at
http://corn.osu.edu/story.php?setissueID=82&storyID=452 [URL verified
5/19/05].
Thomison, Peter. 2005. Corn Replanting Considerations - don’t
be in rush to replant. Crop Observation Reporting Network, Ohio State Univ.
Available online at http://corn.osu.edu/story.php?setissueID=81&storyID=450
[URL verified 5/19/05].
For other information about corn, take a look at the Corn Growers' Guidebook
at http://www.kingcorn.org.
©2005, Purdue University, all rights reserved. It is the policy of the
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