| Literature DB >> 31557241 |
Daljeet S Dhaliwal1, Martin M Williams2.
Abstract
Globally, gains in sweet corn [Zea mays L.var. rugosa (or saccharata)] are a fraction of the yield advances made in field corn (Zea mays L.) in the last half-century. Grain yield improvement of field corn is associated with increased tolerance to higher plant densities (i.e., crowding stress). Processing sweet corn hybrids that tolerate crowding stress have been identified; however, such hybrids appear to be under-planted in the processing sweet corn. Using crowding stress tolerant (CST) hybrids, the objectives of this study were to: (1) identify optimum plant densities for a range of growing conditions; (2) quantify gaps in production between current and optimum plant densities; and (3) enumerate changes in yield and ear traits when shifting from current to optimum plant densities. Using a CST shrunken-2 (sh2) processing sweet corn hybrid, on-farm plant density trials were conducted in thirty fields across the states of Illinois, Minnesota and Wisconsin, from 2013 to 2017 in order to capture a wide variety of growing conditions. Linear mixed-effects models were used to identify the optimum plant density corresponding to maximum ear mass (Mt ha-1), case production (cases ha-1), and profitability to the processor ($ ha-1). Kernel moisture, indicative of plant development, was unaffected by plant density. Ear traits, such as ear number and ear mass per plant, average ear length, and filled ear length declined linearly with increasing plant density. Nonetheless, there was a large economic benefit to the grower and processor by shifting to higher plant densities in most environments. This research shows that increasing plant densities of CST hybrids from current (58,475 plants ha-1) to optimum (73,075 plants ha-1) could improve processing sweet corn green ear yield and processor profitability on average of 1.13 Mt ha-1 and $525 ha-1, respectively.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31557241 PMCID: PMC6762085 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Site characterization of fields employed in on-farm plant density trials.
| Year | State | County | Name | Soil texture | Water supply | Planting date | Harvest date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | IL | LaSalle | MD_Y13 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 19-Jun | 6-Sep |
| 2014 | IL | Champaign | FF_Y14 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 27-May | 11-Aug |
| 2014 | IL | Champaign | VC_Y14 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 27-May | 13-Aug |
| 2014 | IL | DeKalb | TYLR1_Y14 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 6-Jun | 29-Aug |
| 2014 | IL | DeKalb | TYLR2_Y14 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 6-Jun | 29-Aug |
| 2014 | IL | LaSalle | UTI_Y14 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 14-Jun | 5-Sep |
| 2014 | WI | Portage | OKR_Y14 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 19-Jun | 18-Sep |
| 2014 | WI | Portage | PMT_Y14 | Muck sand | Irrigated | 5-Jun | 9-Sep |
| 2014 | WI | Portage | WYN_Y14 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 23-May | 25-Aug |
| 2015 | IL | Champaign | FF_Y15 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 22-May | 5-Aug |
| 2015 | IL | Champaign | VC_Y15 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 22-May | 6-Aug |
| 2015 | IL | Mason | HV_Y15 | Sandy loam | Irrigated | 29-Apr | 20-Jul |
| 2015 | MN | Brown | HOFF_Y15 | Clay loam | Rainfed | 10-Jun | 4-Sep |
| 2015 | MN | Redwood | HOFS_Y15 | Clay loam | Rainfed | 10-Jun | 4-Sep |
| 2015 | WI | Portage | PMT_Y15 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 2-Jun | 3-Sep |
| 2015 | WI | Portage | WY_Y15 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 13-May | 20-Aug |
| 2015 | WI | Waushara | MRT_FY15 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 16-Jun | 15-Sep |
| 2016 | IL | Champaign | FF_Y16 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 16-May | 1-Aug |
| 2016 | IL | Champaign | VC_Y16 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 16-May | 1-Aug |
| 2016 | IL | Mason | HV_Y16 | Sandy loam | Irrigated | 20-Apr | 22-Jul |
| 2016 | MN | Brown | HOFS_Y16 | Clay loam | Rainfed | 13-Jun | 31-Aug |
| 2016 | WI | Adams | AIR_Y16 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 1-Jun | 23-Aug |
| 2016 | WI | Portage | P15_Y16 | Muck sand | Irrigated | 8-Jun | 6-Sep |
| 2016 | WI | Portage | TIMM_Y16 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 19-Jun | 14-Sep |
| 2017 | IL | Champaign | M11_Y17 | Silt loam | Rainfed | 24-Apr | 28-Jul |
| 2017 | IL | Champaign | VC_Y17 | Silt loam | Irrigated | 16-May | 7-Aug |
| 2017 | MN | Brown | HOFS1_Y17 | Clay loam | Rainfed | 10-Jun | 7-Sep |
| 2017 | MN | Brown | HOFS2_Y17 | Clay loam | Rainfed | 11-Jun | 7-Sep |
| 2017 | WI | Portage | PL1_Y17 | Sand | Irrigated | 30-May | 31-Aug |
| 2017 | WI | Portage | PL2_Y17 | Loamy sand | Irrigated | 23-Jun | 26-Sep |
Fig 1Linear mixed effects models of plant density effect of a crowding stress tolerant hybrid on (A) green ear mass (Mt ha-1), (B) case production (cases ha-1) and, (C) gross profit margin ($ ha-1) for four production areas. Thick black line is production area mean fixed effect. Grey lines are individual field relationships (best linear unbiased predictors, BLUPs), as estimated from the random effects structure.
Fig 2Box plots of optimum plant density distributions of a crowding stress tolerant hybrid in four production areas.
Plant densities were optimized for (A) maximum green ear mass (Mt ha-1), (B) maximum case production (cases ha-1) (C) maximum gross profit margin ($ ha-1). Cross (x) sign represent means. Different letters denote significant differences in means at α = 0.05 based on pairwise t-tests.
Comparison) of a crowding stress tolerant hybrid at current plant density and plant density optimized for maximum green ear mass (Mt ha-1), case production (cases ha-1) and gross profit margin ($ ha-1).
| Yield measure | Production area | Current plant density | Optimum plant density | Difference in plant density | Current yield | Maximum yield | Difference in yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green ear mass | Plants ha-1 | Mt ha-1 | |||||
| IL-irrigated | 61,300 | 79,500 | 18,200* | 21.74 | 22.77 | 1.03* | |
| IL-rainfed | 58,400 | 76,200 | 17,800* | 21.60 | 22.78 | 1.18* | |
| MN-rainfed | 55,800 | 73,200 | 17,400* | 22.33 | 23.44 | 1.11* | |
| WI-irrigated | 58,400 | 79,100 | 20,700* | 23.91 | 25.30 | 1.39* | |
| Case production | Plants ha-1 | Cases ha-1 | |||||
| IL-irrigated | 61,300 | 79,300 | 18,000* | 1,480 | 1,570 | 90* | |
| IL-rainfed | 58,400 | 73,000 | 14,600* | 1,400 | 1,475 | 75* | |
| MN-rainfed | 55,800 | 65,900 | 10,100* | 1,610 | 1,655 | 45 | |
| WI-irrigated | 58,400 | 74,100 | 15,700* | 1,685 | 1,770 | 85* | |
| Gross profit margin | Plants ha-1 | $ ha-1 | |||||
| IL-irrigated | 61,300 | 79,300 | 18,000* | 12,000 | 12,700 | 700* | |
| IL-rainfed | 58,400 | 73,000 | 14,600* | 11,300 | 11,800 | 500* | |
| MN-rainfed | 55,800 | 65,900 | 10,100* | 13,200 | 13,500 | 300 | |
| WI-irrigated | 58,400 | 74,100 | 15,700* | 13,800 | 14,400 | 600* | |
Asterisks represent significant differences between values at current and maximum at α = 0.05 based on pairwise t-tests.
Effect of a crowding stress tolerant hybrid on yield traits when shifting from current plant density to plant density optimized for maximum gross profit margin ($ ha-1) across different production areas.
| Yield trait | Production area | Response at current plant density | Response at optimum plant density | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green ear mass | Mt ha-1 | |||
| IL-irrigated | 21.74 | 22.75 | 1.01* | |
| IL-rainfed | 21.60 | 22.71 | 1.11* | |
| MN-rainfed | 22.33 | 23.21 | 0.88* | |
| WI-irrigated | 23.91 | 25.20 | 1.29* | |
| Case production | Cases ha-1 | |||
| IL-irrigated | 1,478 | 1,569 | 91* | |
| IL-rainfed | 1,400 | 1,474 | 74* | |
| MN-rainfed | 1,609 | 1,655 | 46 | |
| WI-irrigated | 1,684 | 1,770 | 86* | |
Asterisks represent significant differences at α = 0.05 based on pairwise t-tests.
Effect of a crowding stress tolerant hybrid on ear traits when shifting from current plant density to plant density optimized for maximum gross profit margin ($ ha-1) across different production areas.
| Ear Trait | Production area | Response at current plant density | Response at optimum plant density | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ears per plant | ||||
| Ear number per plant | IL-irrigated | 1.07 | 0.86 | -0.11* |
| IL-rainfed | 1.00 | 0.91 | -0.08* | |
| MN-rainfed | 1.00 | 0.96 | -0.04* | |
| WI-irrigated | 1.05 | 0.96 | -0.09* | |
| 1.02 | 0.93 | -0.08* | ||
| Kg plant-1 | ||||
| Ear mass per plant | IL-irrigated | 0.36 | 0.29 | -0.07* |
| IL-rainfed | 0.37 | 0.31 | -0.06* | |
| MN-rainfed | 0.40 | 0.36 | -0.04* | |
| WI-irrigated | 0.42 | 0.35 | -0.07* | |
| 0.39 | 0.33 | -0.06* | ||
| cm | ||||
| Average ear length | IL-irrigated | 19.4 | 19.0 | -0.4* |
| IL-rainfed | 19.1 | 18.7 | -0.4* | |
| MN-rainfed | 19.9 | 19.4 | -0.6* | |
| WI-irrigated | 19.3 | 18.8 | -0.5* | |
| 19.3 | 18.9 | -0.5* | ||
| cm | ||||
| Filled ear length | IL-irrigated | 17.9 | 16.9 | -1.0* |
| IL-rainfed | 17.6 | 16.9 | -0.8* | |
| MN-rainfed | 18.8 | 17.8 | -1.0* | |
| WI-irrigated | 18.3 | 17.5 | -0.8* | |
| 18.1 | 17.3 | -0.8* | ||
| (%) | ||||
| Recovery | IL-irrigated | 43.4 | 43.5 | 0.1 |
| IL-rainfed | 42.2 | 42.2 | 0.0 | |
| MN-rainfed | 45.7 | 44.8 | -0.9* | |
| WI-irrigated | 45.4 | 45.3 | -0.1 | |
| 44.1 | 43.9 | -0.2* | ||
| (%) | ||||
| Kernel moisture | IL-irrigated | 77.0 | 77.0 | 0.0 |
| IL-rainfed | 77.3 | 77.3 | 0.0 | |
| MN-rainfed | 77.1 | 77.1 | 0.0 | |
| WI-irrigated | 77.5 | 77.6 | 0.1 | |
| 77.3 | 77.4 | 0.1 | ||
Asterisks represent significant differences at α = 0.05 based on pairwise t-tests.