Post on 04-Jan-2016
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Benefits and Liabilities Associated with Early Maturity
and Determinacy in Cotton
What is Early Maturity and Determinacy?
Physiologically, determinacy might be defined as the degree to which a plant segregates vegetative growth from reproductive growth. A plant that ceases all vegetative growth at the onset of fruiting is completely determinate.
What is Early Maturity and Determinacy?
Physiologically, earliness might be defined by the time required by the plant to reach a reproductive growth stage, and by the rate and duration of fruiting.
What is Early Maturity and Determinacy?
Agronomically, earliness is defined as the time required to mature a satisfactory crop and determinacy is defined as the plant’s ability to maintain vegetative growth and fruit form production after the onset of fruiting.
Characteristics and Components of Early Maturity
• Early fruit initiation (low fruiting node)
• Accelerated rate of fruiting bud development
• Accelerated rate of flowering
• Compressed fruiting interval
• Reduced rate of vegetative growth
Characteristics and Components of Early Maturity
• Early and sharply defined cessation of vegetative and reproductive growth (cutout)
• Shorter boll maturation period
• Shorter plant statureHigh fruit retention rates
Accelerated Flowering and Cutout
Early maturity traits:
• Early fruit initiation
• Increased plant determinacy reflected by plant heights
High fruit retention rates
Advantages of Early Maturity
• Shorter growing season
– Insect pest evasion and management
– Avoidance of environmental adversities:
• Cool planting temperatures
• Heat stress
• Cool temperatures during boll maturation
• Inclement weather during harvest
Escape from an environmental adversity (heat stress) due to early maturity in Pima S-7.
Management Advantages
– Reduced insecticide applications
– Reduced numbers of irrigations
– Increased flexibility in the development of management strategies
Uses or Proposed Uses of Early Maturing Cultivars
• Late planting to create a suicidal emergence of Pink Bollworm (Arizona).
• Late planting following the failure of a medium or full season cultivar due to weather (general, U.S.).
• Early or normal planting to avoid cool temperatures during boll maturation and resulting poor fiber quality (high plains, Texas).
Uses or Proposed Uses of Early Maturing Cultivars
• Early or normal planting to avoid rain and fog conditions at harvest (northern San Joaquin Valley, California).
• Use in multiple cropping schemes, allowing production of food and cash crops in a single year (China, north Africa, general).
Historically, insect pests have been the predominant motivation for the development of early maturing cultivars in the U.S.
• Pre-1890 – Use of early maturing cultivars in northern cotton states due to short growing season.
• 1900’s – Severe boll weevil pressure led to movement of early maturing cultivars into mid-south and the development of new early maturing cultivars.
• 1970’s – Severe bollworm/budworm problems in mid-south renewed breeding efforts for earlier maturing cultivars.
Reduction in growing season, 1960-1987
Location Years
Season Reduction
(planting – harvest)
College Station,
Texas
1966-1987 28 days
Florence,
South Carolina
1968-1987 33 days
Mississippi Delta,
Mississippi
1960-1987 38 days
Cultivar Maturity Groups
Short Medium
3 Weeks
300 HU (30/13 C)
Full
Pima S-7
Pima S-6
DPL 90
DPL 20SG 501
DPL 5415
Short –Season Management for Pink Bollworm Control in the Imperial Valley
of California, 1990-1994
• Primary Goal: Reduce pink bollworm populations area-wide through increasing time in which fields are free of the cotton host.
• Secondary Goal: Cotton host avoidance of damaging late season insect populations.
Management Program for Pink Bollworm in the Imperial Valley
• Early termination of cotton crop with chemical defoliants.
• Early mandatory destruction of plant residue in fields.
• Switch from a full season to a medium season cotton variety (from DPL 90 to DPL5415), an unintended component.
Mandated terminationBoll set, standard cultivar
Boll set, early maturing cultivar
Pink bollworm population
JulyJune Aug SeptMay
Short-Season Management for Pink Bollworm Control, Imperial Valley, CA
Late Season
(August)
Pre-program Program Years
1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
Moths/trap/
night
3.1 4.4 1.4 1.8 0.1 0.0
Larvae/100 bolls
89 15 3 12.5 -- --
Lint yield (Kg/ha)
1242 1177 1069 1133 1460 1503
Disadvantages of Early Maturity and Increased Determinacy
• Limitations on yield potential
• Inflexibility in response to injury
• Increased management oversight
• Increased susceptibility to:
– Smog (ozone) damage
– Foliar leaf spot diseases, nutrient deficiencies, and premature senescence
– Verticillium wilt
Sequential harvests of an early maturing (8709) and later maturing (91-311) cultivar
300
500
700
900
1100
1300
1500
1700
155 166 176 201
Cu
mu
lati
ve Y
ield
(l
bs.
/acr
e)
Days after planting
8709
91-311
Cumulative percent yield of an early maturing (8709) and later maturing (91-311) cultivar
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
155 166 176 201
Days after planting
Cu
mu
lati
ve P
erce
nt
Yie
ld
8709
91-311
Early Foliar Decline, a Maturity Related Disorder of Pima Cotton
Correlation of early foliar decline severity with plant growth traits, foliar potassium, and yield
in 60 populations at Tulare, CA, in 2000.
Traits
Early foliar
Decline rating
Nodes above open bloom -0.64
Plant height -0.67
Foliar potassium -0.56
Lint yield -0.72
• In cotton, Maturity and Determinacy vary along along a continuous scale.
• Benefits and liabilities also change on a scale.
• Environment, management, and economics determine the appropriate level of earliness and determinacy for your situation.