A Mesoscale Study of Corn-Weather Response on Cash-Grain Farms
- 1 February 1968
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Applied Meteorology
- Vol. 7 (1) , 94-104
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0450(1968)007<0094:amsocw>2.0.co;2
Abstract
Weather records for 49 locations and detailed agronomic data from 60 farms in a 400-mi2 area in central Illinois were used to study corn-weather relations exhibited by actual farming operations in a typical agricultural area of the American Corn Belt. Weekly, monthly and seasonal rainfall and temperature values plus agronomic data were correlated with corn yields during 1955–1963. The results are of added importance because the data sample was from a period when new agronomic practices, which could alter corn-weather relationships established in previous studies, were being widely employed. July and August mean temperatures and cumulative degrees above 90F during July and August had the strongest correlations with corn yield, −0.50, −0.69 and −0.51, respectively. July rainfall had a stronger association with yields than rainfall in any other month, but it was considerably less than the association for July temperature. Weekly rainfalls and temperatures in early June and early August correlated mo... Abstract Weather records for 49 locations and detailed agronomic data from 60 farms in a 400-mi2 area in central Illinois were used to study corn-weather relations exhibited by actual farming operations in a typical agricultural area of the American Corn Belt. Weekly, monthly and seasonal rainfall and temperature values plus agronomic data were correlated with corn yields during 1955–1963. The results are of added importance because the data sample was from a period when new agronomic practices, which could alter corn-weather relationships established in previous studies, were being widely employed. July and August mean temperatures and cumulative degrees above 90F during July and August had the strongest correlations with corn yield, −0.50, −0.69 and −0.51, respectively. July rainfall had a stronger association with yields than rainfall in any other month, but it was considerably less than the association for July temperature. Weekly rainfalls and temperatures in early June and early August correlated mo...Keywords
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