4.7 Article

Effects of waterlogging at different stages and durations on maize growth and grain yields

Journal

AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
Volume 261, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2021.107334

Keywords

Maize; Waterlogging stress; Stage and duration; Growth index; Grain yield and its components

Funding

  1. Henan Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [202300410553]
  2. China Agriculture Research System [CARS-02-14]
  3. National Public-interested Scienti-fic Institution Based Research Fund of China [FIRI202001-03, FIRI 2017-03]
  4. Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Program of China (ASTIP)

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Waterlogging at different stages and durations has significant effects on maize growth and yield, with longer duration resulting in more severe adverse effects. Waterlogging at V6 stage has the greatest impact on maize growth and yield, and grain weight and grains per ear have the largest effect on grain yield.
Lysimeter experiments were conducted under a rain shelter to investigate the effects of waterlogging imposing at different stages and with different durations on maize growth, grain yield and yield components in 2017-2019 seasons. The waterlogging treatments were implemented for different durations (2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 days respectively) at the seedling (V3), jointing (V6), tasseling (VT) and milk maturity (R3) stages, with non waterlogging treatment as control (CK). Results shown that waterlogging stage, duration, and the interaction of stage and duration have significant affects (P < 0.01) on all growth index, all yield index, and nearly all yield components indexes in the three seasons. The waterlogging stress decreased plant height, leaf area index, chlorophyll content index, ear length, ear diameter, grain row number per ear, 100-grain weight, grain number per ear, aboveground biomass and harvest index, and increased the bald tip length, and eventually a significant reduction in the grain yield of summer maize. In addition, the severity of the adverse effects increased generally with the lengthening of waterlogging duration. The results of dominant influencing factors indicated that waterlogging occurred at V6 stage have the greatest effects on maize growth and grain yield, followed by V3, VT, and R3 stages, and that the 100-grain weight and grains per ear had the largest effect on grain yield, and other indexes affected maize yield by affecting the 100-grain weight and grains per ear.

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