The growth and performance of cotton in a desert environment: II. Dry matter production
- 1 August 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 73 (1) , 75-86
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600024151
Abstract
SUMMARY: Variety, water and spacing were treatments in two experiments with cotton in 1963 and 1964 in which fruiting points, flowers and bolls were counted and the dry weights and leaf areas of plants were measured at intervals during the season.Until leaf-area index, L, started to decrease, the equation described how dry weight, W, changed. The equation gave smoothed estimates of crop growth rate, C, which were consistent with estimates of photosynthesis made with de Wit's (1965) model. The relationship between G and L conformed to , derived from Beer's Law, rather than C = aL — bL2 derived from the linear regression of E on L. When L > 3 the crop appeared to use most of the available light, so that C approached a maximum. Treatments initially affected dry-matter production through the numbers and types of branches and nodes, which in turn affected the sinks available and thus the proportion of dry matter reinvested in new leaf. This initial period, when growth was simple to describe in conventional terms, was denned as the vegetative phase of growth.The start of the reproductive phase of growth overlapped the vegetative phase. The change from one to the other was completed when the rate of dry weight increase of the bolls, CB, equalled C. This indicated that the sink formed by the bolls had increased sufficiently in size to use all the assimilates available for growth. Sink size increased as the crop flowered and was estimated from the product of the number of bolls and the growth rate of a single boll.When CB equalled C, bolls were shed which prevented the size of the sink to increase beyond the ability of the plant to supply it with assimilates. This agrees with Mason's nutritional theory of boll shedding. Because of the crop's morphology and because age decreased the photosynthesis of the crop, the size of the sink inevitably increased out of phase with the supply of assimilates. The extent to which this was so determined when CB equalled C. It is postulated that environment, genotype and agronomic practice affect yield according to whether they increase or decrease the extent to which the sink size and the supply of assimilates are out of phase.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of Stand Geometry on Light Interception and Net Photosynthesis in Cotton1Crop Science, 1966
- Radiation and CropsExperimental Agriculture, 1965
- The seasonal growth characteristics of irrigated cotton in a dry monsoonal environmentAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1965
- Studies on the Expansion of the Leaf SurfaceJournal of Experimental Botany, 1964
- Relationship of Relative Leaf Growth Rate to Net Assimilation Rate and its Relevance to the Physiological Analysis of Plant YieldNature, 1963
- Light Relations In Plant CommunitiesPublished by Elsevier ,1963
- Inter-Relations of vegetative and reproductive growth, with special reference to indeterminate plantsThe Botanical Review, 1962
- FIBER PROPERTIES AND CARBOHYDRATE AND NITROGEN LEVELS OF COTTON PLANTS AS INFLUENCED BY MOISTURE SUPPLY AND FRUITFULNESSPlant Physiology, 1952
- The Physiological Basis of Variation in YieldPublished by Elsevier ,1952
- SUGAR MOVEMENT TO ROOTS, MINERAL UPTAKE, AND THE GROWTH CYCLE OF THE COTTON PLANTPlant Physiology, 1944