Check Corn Pollination
URBANA, ILL.
We are starting to get reports
that corn pollination
might not have
been as successful as expected
in parts of Illinois.
While the weather was generally
favorable during the peak
period of pollination, it was
warm during the third week of
July, and soil water may have been limiting
during this period in some fields. Thus we
would expect to see this in the areas with low
rainfall in July.
This is not the lack of silking that we saw in
many areas under the drought of 2012. Silks
generally emerged well in most fields this year,
but tassel emergence was slowed by dry soil
conditions in some cases. The warm third week
of July was followed by unusually cool weather,
with some lows in the upper 40s and lower 50s
the last weekend in July.
It’s possible that these unusual conditions
limited pollen production or that silks became
non-receptive (unable to accept and germinate
pollen) before the end of pollen-shed. Indications
are that scattered kernels from poor pollination
are being found at the base of the ear
more than at the tip, which might point toward
lack of early pollen production and possible loss
of silk receptivity.
Regardless of the cause, it’s time to get into
fields to see how successful pollination has
been. Once silks start to dry, remove husks and
shake or pull on silks. Those that detach easily
are from fertilized kernels, while those that stay
attached are on kernels that have not been fertilized.
Silks that emerge more than a week after
silks first appeared and seem to be fresh probably
emerged after rainfall, and there will typically
be little or no pollen available to pollinate
these. The target is to have around 500 kernels
per ear at populations in the lower to mid-
30,000 plant population.
There is little to be done about lack of kernel
set at this point, but it will help us know what’s
coming, and it may help us identify causes.
When different hybrids show different degrees
of this type of problem, it is often more a matter
of timing than genetics; hybrids that silked on a
certain date are often affected more than those
that silked a day or two later. But if the same
hybrid planted on different dates shows the
problem, it may be genetic in nature, or possibly
related to soils or management. For example,
a better root system that can pull water a
little more effectively can make a large difference
in pollination success.
I’d be interested to receive reports and observations
on this so we can try to put the puzzle
together. Δ
DR. EMERSON NAFZIGER: Professor, Research
Education Center Coordinator, University of Illinois