Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6374710 | Field Crops Research | 2015 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Crop canopy temperature (Tc) is associated with transpiration and Tc has been used in crop water stress detection. This study investigates the effect of surface drip and furrow irrigation regimes on cotton Tc. It outlines the relationship between Tc and lint yield, fibre quality and both agronomic (WUEa, kg haâ1 mmâ1 total applied water) and leaf level water-use efficiency (WUEl, μmol[CO2] mmol[H2O]â1) in a high input, high yielding (>1800 kg haâ1) cotton system. Canopy temperature between flowering and crop maturity was monitored. Yield reductions occurred when Tc exceeded 28 °C. Reductions in fibre length outside the ideal range (>28.6 mm) occurred when Tc exceeded 31 °C, while desirable micronaire (3.8-4.5) was observed at Tc between 25 and 32 °C. Desirable fibre quality and peak lint yield can be realised if an irrigation scheduling protocol maintains average canopy temperatures below 28 °C. However, maximum WUEa was observed at a higher average Tc (30 °C) than peak lint yield (28 °C), which would correspond to a predicted 23% reduction in lint yield from the peak (3030 kg haâ1). Therefore, the trade-off between peak yield and WUEa needs to be considered in conjunction with irrigation water costs and availability when scheduling irrigations based on canopy temperature.
Keywords
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Agronomy and Crop Science
Authors
Warren C. Conaty, James R. Mahan, James E. Neilsen, Daniel K.Y. Tan, Stephen J. Yeates, Bruce G. Sutton,