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Title: Soil Water Extraction Patterns in Skip Row Corn, Sorghum, and Sunflower

Author
item Nielsen, David
item Vigil, Merle
item Calderon, Francisco
item SCHNEEKLOTH, JOEL - COLO. STATE UNIV. EXTENSI
item Poss, David
item Henry, William
item Benjamin, Joseph

Submitted to: Meeting Abstract
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/6/2007
Publication Date: 11/5/2007
Citation: Nielsen, D.C., Vigil, M.F., Calderon, F.J., Schneekloth, J., Poss, D.J., Henry, W.B., Benjamin, J.G. 2007. Soil Water Extraction Patterns in Skip Row Corn, Sorghum, and Sunflower. Meeting Abstract. Presented at the National American Society of Agronomy Annual Meeting. Nov. 5-8, 2007. New Orleans, LA.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Growing crops in planting configurations that increase row spacing while maintaining field plant populations (skip row) has been proposed as a means to stabilize dryland crop yields under the erratic and sometimes very low precipitation conditions that frequently exit in the Great Plains. Doing so should force plants to undergo increased water stress (and restricted vegetative development) early in the season as higher in-row populations increase competition for soil water near the row. More soil water stored farther away from the row (in the skipped row area) should be available during the more critical reproductive stage compared with conventional 76 cm row spacing, leading to lower water stress during flowering and greater yield. This study compares the soil water extraction patterns in skip row corn, sorghum, and sunflower at Akron, CO. Results indicated that sorghum and sunflower were able to extract the stored soil water in the skip (76 and 114 cm from the planted row). Results for corn were inconsistent, and appear to be variety dependent.