Plant Soil Environ., 2018, 64(6):260-267 | DOI: 10.17221/141/2018-PSE

Differential responses of maize yield to drought at vegetative and reproductive stagesOriginal Paper

Na MI*,1, Fu CAI1, Yushu ZHANG*,1, Ruipeng JI1, Shujie ZHANG1, Yang WANG2
1 Institute of Atmospheric Environment, China Meteorological Administration, Shenyang, P.R. China
2 Institute of Meteorological Science of Liaoning Province, Shenyang, P.R. China

Determining the effects of progressive drought (PD) on dry matter production, partitioning, and grain yield of maize will help in designing a suitable strategy for water management. Though influences of drought on maize growth and development have been investigated extensively, few of them focused on the effects of different duration and occurrence stage of PD on yield formation of maize. Six variations of PD, in the form of withholding irrigation for varying lengths of time from jointing or tasselling, were tested in the field, using a mobile rain shelter, in terms of their effects on aboveground biomass accumulation, partitioning, and grain yield in 2015-2016. The results showed that grain yield was significantly reduced by PD during either vegetative or reproductive stage, and the reduction in grain yield from reproductive PD (41.6-46.6%) was greater than that from vegetative PD (18.6-26.2%). The decrease in grain yield was largely caused by the decrease in kernels per ear (r2 = 0.88, P < 0.001). This research implied that guaranteeing water supply for maize during reproductive stage is crucially important to avoid the reduction in kernels per ear and grain yield.

Keywords: drought stress; corn; kernels per ear; yield component; Zea mays L.

Published: June 30, 2018  Show citation

ACS AIP APA ASA Harvard Chicago Chicago Notes IEEE ISO690 MLA NLM Turabian Vancouver
Na M, CAI F, ZHANG Y, Ruipeng J, ZHANG S, WANG Y. Differential responses of maize yield to drought at vegetative and reproductive stages. Plant Soil Environ. 2018;64(6):260-267. doi: 10.17221/141/2018-PSE.
Download citation

References

  1. Allen R.G., Pereira L.S., Raes D., Smith M. (1998): Crop Evapotranspiration: Guidelines for Computing Crop Water Requirements. Rome, United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, Irrigation and Drainage, Paper 56.
  2. Benjamin J.G., Nielsen D.C., Vigil M.F., Mikha M.M., Calderon F. (2015): Cumulative deficit irrigation effects on corn biomass and grain yield under two tillage systems. Agricultural Water Management, 159: 107-114. Go to original source...
  3. Cai F., Ming H.Q., Mi N., Xie Y.B., Zhang Y.S. (2017): Comparison of effects of root water uptake functions for simulating surface water and heat fluxes within a corn farmland ecosystem in Northeast China. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, 143: 04017040. Go to original source...
  4. Cavero J., Farré I., Debaeke P., González J.M.F. (2000): Simulation of maize yield under water stress with the EPICphase and CROPWAT models. Agronomy Journal, 92: 679-690. Go to original source...
  5. Çakir R. (2004): Effect of water stress at different development stages on vegetative and reproductive growth of corn. Field Crops Research, 89: 1-16. Go to original source...
  6. Denmead O.T., Shaw R.H. (1960): The effects of soil moisture stress at different stages of growth on the development and yield of corn. Agronomy Journal, 52: 272-275. Go to original source...
  7. Earl H.J., Davis R.F. (2003): Effect of drought stress on leaf and whole canopy radiation use efficiency and yield of maize. Agronomy Journal, 95: 688-696. Go to original source...
  8. Fang Y., Zhang Y.S., Mi N., Sun T., Liu G., Wang D., Jia Y., Feng A.L., Liu B. (2018): Effect of drought stress and water replenishing on maize growth and yield. Journal of Maize Science, 26: 89-97. (In Chinese)
  9. Ge T.D., Sui F.G., Bai L.P., Tong C.L., Sun N.B. (2012): Effects of water stress on growth, biomass partitioning, and water-use efficiency in summer maize (Zea mays L.) throughout the growth cycle. Acta Physiologiae Plantarum, 34: 1043-1053. Go to original source...
  10. Gheysari M., Sadeghi S.-H., Loescher H.W., Amiri S., Zareian M.J., Majidi M.M., Asgarinia P., Payero J.O. (2017): Comparison of deficit irrigation management strategies on root, plant growth and biomass productivity of silage maize. Agricultural Water Management, 182: 126-138. Go to original source...
  11. Grant R.F., Jackson B.S., Kiniry J.R., Arkin G.F. (1989): Water deficit timing effects on yield components in maize. Agronomy Journal, 81: 61-65. Go to original source...
  12. Hao B., Xue Q., Marek T.H., Jessup K.E., Hou X., Xu W., Bynum E.D., Bean B.W. (2016): Radiation-use efficiency, biomass production, and grain yield in two maize hybrids differing in drought tolerance. Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science, 202: 269-280. Go to original source...
  13. Jones J.W., Hoogenboom G., Porter C.H., Boote K.J., Batchelor W.D., Hunt L.A., Wilkens P.W., Singh U., Gijsman A.J., Ritchie J.T. (2003): The DSSAT cropping system model. European Journal of Agronomy, 18: 235-265. Go to original source...
  14. Li L.H., Yu Q., Zheng Y.F., Wang J., Fang Q.X. (2006): Simulating the response of photosynthate partitioning during vegetative growth in winter wheat to environmental factors. Field Crops Research, 96: 133-141. Go to original source...
  15. Liu Z.J., Hubbard K.G., Lin X.M., Yang X.G. (2013): Negative effects of climate warming on maize yield are reversed by the changing of sowing date and cultivar selection in Northeast China. Global Change Biology, 19: 3481-3492. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  16. Lu Y.L., Hao Z.F., Xie C.X., Crossa J., Araus J.-L., Gao S.B., Vivek B.S., Magorokosho C., Mugo S., Makumbi D., Taba S., Pan G.T., Li X.H., Rong T.Z., Zhang S.H., Xu Y.B. (2011): Large-scale screening for maize drought resistance using multiple selection criteria evaluated under water-stressed and well-watered environments. Field Crops Research, 124: 37-45. Go to original source...
  17. Oveysi M., Mirhadi M.J., Madani H., Nourmohammadi G., Zarghami R., Madani A. (2010): The impact of source restriction on yield formation of corn (Zea mays L.) due to water deficiency. Plant, Soil and Environment, 56: 476-481. Go to original source...
  18. Saseendran S.A., Ahuja L.R., Ma L., Nielsen D.C., Trout T.J., Andales A.A., Chávez J.L., Ham J. (2014): Enhancing the water stress factors for simulation of corn in RZWQM2. Agronomy Journal, 106: 81-94. Go to original source...
  19. Soler C.M.T., Hoogenboom G., Sentelhas P.C., Duarte A.P. (2007): Impact of water stress on maize grown off-season in a subtropical Environment. Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science, 193: 247-261. Go to original source...
  20. Song H., Li Y.B., Zhou L., Xu Z.Z., Zhou G.S. (2018): Maize leaf functional response to drought episode and rewatering. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 249: 57-70. Go to original source...
  21. Yazar A., Howell T.A., Dusek D.A., Copeland K.S. (1999): Evaluation of crop water stress index for LEPA irrigated corn. Irrigation Science, 18: 171-180. Go to original source...
  22. Yin X.G., Jabloun M., Olesen J.E., Öztürk I., Wang M., Chen F. (2016): Effects of climatic factors, drought risk and irrigation requirement on maize yield in the Northeast Farming Region of China. Journal of Agricultural Science, 154: 1171-1189. Go to original source...
  23. Zhao Z., Luo Y. (2007): Projections of climate change over Northeastern China for 21 st century. Journal of Meteorology and Environment, 23: 1-4. (In Chinese)
  24. Zinselmeier C., Jeong B.-R., Boyer J.S. (1999): Starch and the control of kernel number in maize at low water potentials. Plant Physiology, 121: 25-36. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY NC 4.0), which permits non-comercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original publication is properly cited. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.