Affiliation:
1. USDA Farm Production and Conservation Batesville Mississippi USA
2. Department of Plant and Soil Sciences Mississippi State University Mississippi State Mississippi USA
3. West Tennessee Research and Education Center University of Tennessee Jackson Tennessee USA
4. Tennessee Valley Research and Extension Center Belle Mina Alabama USA
5. Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology and Plant Pathology Mississippi State University Mississippi State Mississippi USA
6. Mississippi Water Resources Research Institute Mississippi State University Mississippi State Mississippi USA
7. Department of Agricultural Economics Mississippi State University Mississippi State Mississippi USA
Abstract
AbstractCrop growth and development is affected by intraspecies competition. This study was conducted to determine whether cotton productivity and profitability could be manipulated through planting geometry. The effects of row spacing, planting pattern, and variety on cotton fruit distribution, yield, and net returns were investigated near Bella Mina, AL, on a Decatur silt loam (fine, kaolinitic, thermic Rhodic Paleudults); Jackson, TN, on a Calhoun silt loam (fine‐silty, mixed, active, thermic Typic Glossaqualfs); Starkville, MS, on a Leeper silty clay loam (fine, smectitic, nonacid, thermic Vertic Epiaquepts); and Stoneville, MS, on a Bosket very fine sandy loam (fine‐loamy, mixed, active, thermic Mollic Hapludalfs). For both the 76‐ and 97‐cm row spacing, transitioning from a solid to a 2 × 1 skip row pattern reduced cotton lint yield by 19%. Reduced lint yield in the 2 × 1 skip row pattern was attributed primarily to a 7% decrease in the number of Zone 1 and first‐position bolls. Consequently, planting on a solid rather than skip row pattern increased net returns by 21%. Planting cotton in either 76‐ or 97‐cm rows using a solid rather than skip row pattern likely increases crop productivity and profitability across the US cotton belt.
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science
Reference28 articles.
1. Analysis of Cotton Yield Stability Across Population Densities
2. Measuring maturity of cotton using nodes above white flower;Bourland F. M.;The Journal of Cotton Science,2002
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