Drought Puts Corn Pollination Process in Jeopardy

This year’s corn needs rain and needs it soon.

By Debbie Johnson, University of Missouri

This year’s corn needs rain and needs it soon.

The next couple weeks are critical for corn pollination, because silk growth and tassel pollen-shed must be in sync to create corn kernels. That coordination relies on water.

“Silks are at least 99% water, and they use it as the driving force to elongate from inside the husk until they emerge outside the husks, or about 10 inches,” said William Wiebold, professor of plant sciences in the University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources. “If the pollen sheds from the tassel and the silks aren’t there, no kernels are produced.”

Silk growth is only half of the critical pollination process. If the pollen does reach the silk, a tube created by the pollen grain must be able to grow down the silk to where the kernel will be, Wiebold said. There has to be enough water to keep the corn silk wet enough for the pollen tube to grow through its entire length to reach the ear.

This coordination process, colloquially called nick, is so important that if dry, hot conditions prevent it, you could see a 30-40% yield loss, Wiebold said.

A typical ear will have 12 to 14 rows, each with 35 to 40 potential kernels, he said. Lose just three kernels per row and that’s a substantial yield loss.

The lack of rain is having other negative effects on corn. Normally, corn tasseling occurs when plants are 7, maybe 8 feet tall, Wiebold said. Water pushes that growth.

“There are reports coming from throughout the state that corn is tasseling at 5 1/2 to 6 feet tall,” Wiebold said. “That’s a couple of feet shorter than normal, and it’s because there’s wasn’t enough water to increase plant cell size.”

Corn leaf blades are coming in smaller for the same reason. All these stresses put this season’s corn yield in question.

“Probably the next two weeks will really determine what our yield will be,” Wiebold said. “Some places that had rain, like northwest Missouri, will see less yield loss. Places like St. Charles County and along the rivers, which have deeper soils with good water-holding capacity, should also experience less yield loss.”

Places that have seen little rain, have claypan soils or have compacted soils will experience large yield losses if rain doesn’t come soon. A heavy yield hit in the Corn Belt could send ripples through the futures market.

“The Chicago futures market will start calling around to the states to see what the weather is like,” Wiebold said. “It’s really important and it can drive the market price that farmers will receive.”

Less corn produced would mean higher prices, putting pressure on livestock producers who feed corn. At the end of this food chain, consumers could see sticker shock for meat and dairy products.

For More Information
Will you receive needed rain? Check your local forecast with AgWeb’s Pinpoint Weather.

How are your crops responding to your area’s weather? Submit your report to AgWeb Crop Comments.


AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Soybeans ended higher as rumored export business was confirmed by USDA with a flash sale of 13.2 million bu. sold to unknown destinations. However, China was also looking for corn and wheat.
Wednesday morning USDA reported a flash sale of 13.2 million bushels of soybeans to unknown destinations and Randy Martinson with Martinson Ag says the market is betting that its China.
Soybeans were sharply lower in the overnight trade and then saw a gap higher open during the day session on talk that China was in pricing U.S. soybeans says Brian Grete with Commstock Investments.
Read Next
A two-pass boron strategy at bloom and pod set shows consistent yield payoffs across the Corn Belt, though agronomists warn the line between benefit and toxicity can be narrow.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App