“Flash Drought” Hurts Young Corn Plants, Brace Roots Fail To Grow Without Moisture
COLUMBIA, MO.
“Call it a flash drought,” said Pat Guinan,
University of Missouri climatologist.
The fast developing drought slows
growing crops.
No rain and high temperatures cover most of
Missouri and nearby regions. Abnormally dry
weather covers much of the mid-western Corn
Belt.
Soil moisture reserves are drawn down by
high evapotranspiration rates. That’s a combination
of solar radiation, temperatures, relative
humidity and wind to evaporate water from soil
and plants.
“Those combined with many cloudless days in
May to hasten loss of soil moisture,” Guinan
said.May, usually the wettest month of the year
and when corn really begins to grow, is on track
to be abnormally dry. “According to weather
records, the Missouri Bootheel has one of the
driest April-May periods in 118 years,” Guinan
said.
Those unusually dry conditions affected only
the Bootheel in early spring, but cover the entire
state as Memorial Day weekend approaches.
“It’s going to seem more like the Fourth of
July,” said Guinan, with MU Extension Commercial
Agriculture. Temperatures will climb
well into the 90s, with low humidity and drying
winds, especially in the southern half of Missouri.
The drought already causes death of corn
roots, Bill Wiebold, MU agronomist, told regional
extension specialists on a weekly teleconference.
“This may be a year with rootless corn,”
Wiebold said. A set of roots extending from the
first node of the corn stalk will dry up and die if
they do not find moisture.
Those nodal roots, sometimes called brace
roots, supply needed moisture for cornstalk
growth. Some corn plants in MU research plots
are just seven inches tall. “Usually corn would
be knee-high by now,” Wiebold said. “While they
are called brace roots, the nodal roots supply
moisture for the growing plant. Without water,
the plant cells don’t elongate.”
The slow start on growth can affect cornstalks
all season. “Corn will be shorter and ears will
grow closer to the ground,” Wiebold said. “You’ll
have to aim your combine snout lower this fall.”
Corn plants might overcome the initial lack of
root growth, if rain falls soon. “The corn plant
keeps trying to put out new roots,” Wiebold
said.
Until those nodal roots form, the plant depends
on primary roots, which grow deeper in
the soil from below the seed corn kernel. If primary
roots are in dry soil the plants may die. If
secondary roots fail, the plants may fall over
from lack of support.
“There’s nothing a farmer can do,” Wiebold
said. “It just takes rain.”
Wiebold said, “It’s hard to predict what will
happen to corn yields. If we have rootless corn
and plants fall over, the corn could be a total
loss. If rains come, roots can grow.”
However, long before the corn ear sets silks
and stalks tassel, the number of potential kernels
on each ear of corn is being determined.
Early drought affects the number of rows of kernels
on an immature corncob.
Then, droughts in early July can affect how
long that cob grows, how many kernels are set
and how much they fill. All affect yield.
“In polling my fellow agronomists, I’ve had estimates
of total loss to something just short of a
bumper crop,” Wiebold said.
Dry weather affects other crops as well. Uneven
stands of soybean result from lack of soil
moisture, Wiebold said. “I’ve seen tall soybeans,
short soybeans and no soybeans in the same
row.” At planting some seeds found moisture
and came right up. Other seed waited for rain.
Some seed never received moisture.
“The worst thing that happens is to get 1/10 of
an inch of rain after planting in dry soil,”
Wiebold said. “That’s enough to germinate seed,
but not enough to grow roots.”
Wiebold said wheat is ripe. “I’d never seen
wheat harvest in May. It looks good. But, seed
heads may not be full.”
Rob Kallenbach, MU forages specialist, said
pastures are growing at half normal rates.
“Some high quality hay was baled early, as rain
didn’t fall on it during drying.”
The weather will determine the crops, as always.
Guinan had the final word on the flash
drought: “Let’s hope it goes away as fast as it
arrived.” Δ