Should We Plant Corn This Early When The Soil Is This Cold?
URBANA, ILL.
Illinois producers were able
to do a great deal of tillage
last fall and to apply a considerable
amount of nitrogen.
With limited rainfall in most
areas in recent weeks – most
of the state has received less
than 2 inches since March 15,
and much of central Illinois
less than an inch – fieldwork has started in
earnest, with additional N applied, along with
some spring tillage. It’s no exaggeration to say
that soil conditions in Illinois in 2011 are
among the best we’ve ever seen during the first
week of April.
We’ve had fair to good planting conditions
some years during the first week of April, and
in recent years this usually brings a start to
planting. A few decades ago planting this early
would rarely have been done, but with better
seed, seed treatments, and planters, along with
what have usually been good stands from such
early planting, many producers will now plant
the first week of April without too much concern.
This year, however, soils are cooler than
normal, with morning temperatures in the low
40s or even the 30s and air temperatures below
freezing some mornings this past week.
We know that there is some risk involved in
very early planting, but cool soil temperatures
are not a major risk factor. Instead, stands poor
enough to require replanting have usually followed
heavy rainfall soon after planting, with
seeds or seedlings dying from lack of oxygen.
Chances of this happening are no higher for
early planting than for later. In fact, planting
into cooler soils may improve chances for emergence
following rainfall, since seeds are not triggered
to germinate and emerge as rapidly in cool
soils, so they often may survive longer in cool,
wet soils than in warm, wet soils.
The major risk from low spring temperatures
is not from a delay in germination and emergence
but from frost events after plants have
emerged. Clearly, the chances of this happening
are greater with early planting, especially
early planting into warm soils, or when soils
warm up rapidly to bring on germination and
early emergence. The most recent occurrence of
this over a wide area in Illinois was in 2005,
when air temperatures dropped into the upper
20s for one or two nights during the first week
of May. Corn planted early enough to have
emerged and grown to the 2-leaf stage or so was
damaged, and some was killed, while later planted
corn mostly escaped. Frost that late
was unusual, as was having had soils warm
enough long enough for corn to be that size
when the frost occurred.
So should you plant corn into soil at 40-degree
temperatures the first or second week of
April when the soil is in great shape to plant? I
would answer yes, but with a few “buts.” First,
we do not expect yields of corn planted in the
first week of April to be higher than those of
corn planted the third of fourth week of April.
We have, in fact, had a few instances when corn
planted in late April yielded more than corn
planted early in April. This doesn’t happen often
enough to rule out early planting, but it does
mean that the main reason to plant in early
April is to be done by late April – to avoid late planting
yield loss – not because the earliest
plantings will produce the highest yields. Another
caution is to plant early only when
seedbed conditions stay favorable; if it rains or
is still wet, don’t try to get back in too soon.
It typically requires about 110 to 120 growing
degree-days for corn to emerge. With highs in
the mid-60s and lows in the 40s to low 50s, we
accumulate less than 10 GDD per day, so it can
easily take two to three weeks for the crop to
emerge. That by itself has not usually been a
problem, but it still is a long time during which
problems can develop that hinder emergence.
So early-planted corn should be watched carefully,
especially when GDD accumulations pick
up and the crop approaches emergence. While
we hope that we won't need to replant, a final
advantage of very early planting (as long as it
warms up so the crop emerges early as well) is
that replanting can be done early enough to
avoid large penalties from late (re)planting. Δ
DR. EMERSON NAFZIGER: Professor of Agronomic
Extension, University of Illinois