Corn Planted Too Densely Can Hurt Yields
ST. JOSEPH, LA.
Conventional wisdom says the more ears of
corn to the acre, the greater the yield will
be. While this is true to a certain extent,
too many corn plants to the acre can cause
problems, said Rick Mascagni, an LSU AgCenter
agronomist at the Northeast Research Station.
Mascagni studies the management practices
that can influence yields of corn and grain
sorghum, including plant density, nitrogen
rates of fertilization and timing of the application,
variety type and irrigation.
He is examining seeding rates on both irrigated
and dry-land corn fields. He says with a
bag of corn seed averaging nearly $300, it is important
for producers to get the most they can
out of their seed.
“A grower can increase the risk of aflatoxin by
having too many plants, especially on nonirrigated
fields,” Mascagni said.
Mascagni says the seeding rate for dry-land
corn should be approximately 26,000-28,000
seeds per acre with irrigated fields having a
seeding rate of 32,000-34,000 seeds per acre.
“Three corn plants per foot on a 40-inch row
are about 40,000 plants per acre,” Mascagni
said, adding that plant populations this high
probably do not increase yield but can create
stress on nonirrigated soils, which may lessen
plant quality. Additionally, higher populations
can result in increased lodging, which hurts
yields.
Mascagni is also studying the performance of
flex-ear corn hybrids. The flex-ear variety is influenced
by environmental conditions during
the growing season. If conditions are dry, ear
size is not affected. However, if adequate moisture
conditions exist, the flex-ear has the capacity
to produce a larger ear with more rows
and kernels per row. An advantage of the flexear
is that the optimum plant populations are
generally lower compared to a fixed-ear hybrid.
In 2012, the optimum plant population for
flex-ear hybrids was about 28,000 plants per
acre on an irrigated Sharkey clay study at St.
Joseph, averaging nearly 215 bushels per acre.
One way producers can maximize their profitability
with grain sorghum is to get a second
harvest or a ratoon crop from a single planting.
This practice is more common with sugarcane
and rice than grain sorghum in Louisiana.
Mascagni is looking at whether a ratoon crop
of grain sorghum is economically viable in three
locations – Crowley, Alexandria and St. Joseph.
In 2012, an early frost terminated the ratoon
crop prematurely. For 2013, Mascagni is repeating
the study.
Mascagni is also studying optimum planting
dates and nitrogen rates for grain sorghum. Δ