Author:
DALE A. E.,DRENNAN D. S. H.
Abstract
Maize seedlings (cultivars Bastion, Ace, Anko and Mirna) were
raised for 15, 30 or 45 days in a glasshouse and planted in the field
between early May and mid-June in 1989 and 1990, at 10
plants/m2. Samples of transplants and direct-seeded
crops of the same cultivars were taken at regular intervals throughout
the growing season for growth analyses. In both years, the 15-day-old
transplants established more rapidly in the field than older
transplants, and the patterns of leaf production of these young
transplants were similar to those of direct-seeded maize. Transplants
flowered earlier than direct-seeded maize from the same planting date.
At most harvests, transplants showed significantly higher dry weights
than their direct-seeded counterparts, and May-planted maize had
significantly higher dry weights than June-planted crops, while
cultivar effects were small. Final biomass yields were consistently
higher in 1989 (17 t/ha) than in 1990 (11 t/ha). In both
seasons, particularly in 1990, there was a trend for a lower harvest
index in direct-seeded maize which reflected its immaturity at final
harvest. The lowest harvest index (0·07) in 1990 was recorded
for direct-seeded maize of the late cultivar, Mirna (June planting),
the highest harvest index (0·65) for 30-day-old Mirna
transplants (May-planted). A comparison of the experienced effective
temperature sums during the vegetative, reproductive and grain-filling
phases suggested that the transplant nursery period provides an
advancement in thermal time which can affect grain-filling and crop
maturity. Year to year variation in climate seems to be of primary
importance for yield advantages of transplanted over direct-seeded
maize.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
7 articles.
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