Purple And Yellow Corn Plants
URBANA, ILL.
The corn crop that was
planted in May is up and
growing in most fields,
but there have been numerous
reports of fields with uneven
plant sizes and colors,
including purple and yellow
plants. Many are wondering if
this will decrease potential
yields.
Based on past experience many people expect
to see purple corn when soils are cool and dry
during early plant growth stages, or in that rare
field with low soil test phosphorus levels. The
purple color is from a pigment that forms when
there is more sugar in the leaves than the plant
can utilize. Low phosphorus inhibits sugar
movement out of leaves, and cool, dry soils reduce
root growth and sugar movement to the
roots. Both of these increase sugars in the plant
and can make the tissue turn purple.
Soils are not cool and dry in Illinois now, but
surface soils are drying out in many fields, and
it’s likely that roots growth up to now has been
restricted some by having soils too wet and in
some cases also compacted by tillage and planting
operations. In fields where the plants have
taken up enough nitrogen and water to grow
well but roots remain constricted, purpling
might be common now, especially in those hybrids
that have a tendency to form the purple
pigment.
We expect the problem of purple corn to correct
itself as root growth continues. It will help
if wet soils continue to dry out, but in fields with
dry surface soils, root growth might benefit from
some rainfall. The high sugar content that leads
to purpling means that the plant is producing
sugars through photosynthesis, which is a good
sign. There is no evidence that temporary purpling
affects yield of the crop, though factors
such as soil compaction that can lead to purpling
might also reduce yields if the weather is
dry later in the season.
Other fields are showing the yellow color that
characterized nitrogen deficiency. In some cases
this diagnosis is strengthened by our being able
to see patterns such as N applicator knife tracks
where the plants are greener. As is the case with
purpling, we tend to see more yellow plants in
the lower areas of the field. This is both where
soils were wetter at planting time, so are more
compacted, and where we would expect more N
loss and poor root growth due to wet soils.
Some have already responded to yellow corn
by applying a higher rate of sidedress N than
had been planned, or by, or applying sidedress
N on top of a full rate of N already there. Some
may even have applied foliar N or broadcast
urea by air to try to get N into plants quickly. If
soils are still wet in such fields, plants are continuing
to struggle with poor root growth and
poor root function, so adding N might not have
much immediate effect.
It is likely that the problem of yellow corn is,
like that of purple corn, more related to poor
root growth than to low level of soil nutrients.
Student interns working at the Orr Center in
Perry sampled soils the first week of June in a
study where different N rates were applied as
UAN in the first week of April. That site received
some 17 inches of rain in April and May, and we
expected that some of the N would have been
moved to below the top two feet.
In fact, we found as much or more total N (nitrate
plus ammonium) in the top two feet the
first week of June than we applied as UAN the
first week of April. We recovered about 90 lb. of
N where we had applied 60 lb., and just over
240 lb. of N where we had applied 240 lb. So it’s
likely that some of the N there now was produced
by mineralization, and that some fertilizer
N was moved down below two feet deep, but
the net amount available to the crop after highloss
conditions certainly has not been drastically
reduced.
As soils dry out in most areas of Illinois and
temperatures stay warm, it’s likely that many
fields with yellow corn plants will improve, in
some cases rapidly. Late planting and warm
temperatures do tend to favor top growth over
root growth, but we expect that as leaves grow
and start improve in color and as soil oxygen
levels increase as soils dry, sugars will become
more available to the roots as well as the tops,
and this will further improve root uptake of nutrients.
If crop color remains poor even after a week of
drying soils and good growing conditions, then
it is possible that N movement to below the rooting
depth is affecting the ability of the crop to
grow out of this problem. Our soil measurements
suggest that in most cases N is likely still
present, but a small “booster” shot of N might
help the crop revive and reach the N more
quickly. The crop has roots extending to the
middle of the rows by the time it have 4 or 5
leaves, so injecting N between the rows should
work to get it into the plant. Broadcast urea will
need some rainfall to reach the roots. Δ