Friday, 6 January 2006 - 8:00 AM

Effects from a corn rotation on cotton dry matter partitioning and lint yield

W.T. Pettigrew, H.A. Bruns, W.R. Meredith, Jr., L.D. Young, and S.R. Stetina. USDA-ARS, P.O. Box 345, Stoneville, MS 38776

Increasing input costs combined with low prices for lint have caused some cotton producers to consider rotating a portion of their acreage to other crops in search of the elusive increased profits. This study investigated how cotton lint yield, yield components, dry matter partitioning and fiber quality were affected when corn was grown the previous 1 or 2 seasons. Four crop production strategies were implemented in 2000 and continuing through 2003: 1) continuous cotton, 2) continuous corn, 3) corn-cotton-corn-cotton, 4) cotton-corn-corn-cotton. These strategies were timed so that cotton was grown in 2003 for all the production systems featuring cotton. Other than a slight increase in plant height, none of the dry matter partitioning traits were affected by growing cotton after a year or two of growing corn. Rotating the land to corn for one year did not improve yields, but a slight lint yield increase was observed after a two year corn rotation. These minimal yield increases, in and of themselves, were probably not sufficient to justify a change in cotton production systems. However, other economic or agronomic factors might weigh large enough to justify a switch.

See more of Cotton Physiology Conference - Session B
See more of Cotton Physiology Conference

See more of The Beltwide Cotton Conferences, January 3-6 2006