Q: How serious is the problem?
A: The entire state of Illinois received above-normal rainfall
in May, ranging from 1 to 2 inches above normal in the
southeastern edge of the state to as much as 8 inches above
normal in northwestern Illinois. Some areas had some planting
days early, but there have been no wider windows across the
whole region to get the crop planted.
“A short break from rain the last few days of May has allowed
some planting, but many fields remain wet, some have water
standing, and there is no expectation that things will dry up
soon to allow widespread planting,” Nafziger says.
Q: Won’t driving on soils that are still wet compact the soil
so badly that yields will suffer?
A: In April, there’s no reward for the risk of planting into wet
soils – yields from planting in late April are as high as those
from planting in early April.
“That’s no longer the case in late May or early June, when every
day of delay costs yield. We don’t want to get stuck in the
field or plant where seedbed soil is too wet to crumble, but it
makes sense to start planting even though we know heavy
equipment will cause compaction. While the formation of a
physical barrier to root growth isn’t desirable, compaction can
actually help water to move from deeper in the soil to the
roots,” Nafziger says.
Q: Should we “open up” soils by tilling them when they’re wet
so that the surface dries out faster?
A: The capillary rise of water from deeper layers to the surface
is disrupted by surface tillage, and that means slower water
movement to the surface and faster drying of the surface soil.
That also means that deeper layers stay wetter. Claypan soils in
south-central Illinois already have a compacted zone, so driving
on them to open up the soil may do little damage. Although it
may make soils look drier on the surface, Nafziger notes,
tillage of already-tilled or deep soils is unlikely to be
beneficial.
Q: How do I decide whether to take prevented planting or to
plant the crop even if it’s late?
A: Nafziger says a recent paper from Iowa State reported yield
losses of about 25% (55 bushels) for corn planted June 10, 40%
(88 bushels) on June 20, and 61% (133 bushels) on June 30.
Therefore, planting corn on the last insurable date (June 25)
would be expected to produce about half the normal yield. “There
is some anecdotal evidence that yields could exceed those
numbers, but for now that’s the best guess we have,” Nafziger
says.
Yield declines should be less steep for soybean than for corn
when planting later in June: Soybean yields may reach 50% of
early-planted yields by early July in south-central and southern
Illinois. Yields of soybeans planted in late June or later in
central and northern Illinois are strongly affected by
growing-season weather, and so are expected to vary widely.
Soybeans planted after mid- or late June in northern Illinois
may not mature before frost.
Q: Should I change corn hybrids or soybean varieties to ones
with earlier maturity?
A: Maybe, says Nafziger. According to predictions based on
growing degree days (GDD) left in the season after a given
planting date, some hybrids, especially in northern Illinois,
might need to be exchanged for shorter-maturing ones. “Because
planting a hybrid late usually lowers its GDD requirement, it
might still be safe to plant normal-maturity hybrids in central
and southern Illinois, if planting can be done before mid-June,”
he adds.
Because soybean flowering responds to photoperiod, varieties
across the range of commonly-used maturities will flower at
about the same time if planted in the second half of June.
Therefore, Nafziger says, there is little need to change soybean
varieties. However, he adds, north of I-80 in Illinois,
producers should plant varieties no later than MG 2.8 or 2.9 if
planting is delayed past mid-June.
“If July temperatures are normal, this might prove to be
unnecessary, but cool weather (especially nights) in July could
delay flowering to late July, and that could substantially delay
maturity and push seed filling into less favorable conditions,”
he says.
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Q: What do we do about nitrogen fertilizer for
corn?
A: “This is one of the really tough challenges, with such a wet May
following a wet fall with limited nitrogen application and limited
ability to apply nitrogen this spring,” Nafziger says. For fields
that have been very wet, it’s likely that some of the nitrogen
applied last fall or in early spring has moved down in the soil, and
some may have left the field in tile drainage water. If soils dry in
June, this movement will slow, and as plants begin to grow and take
up nitrogen, some nitrogen may move back to the roots from deeper in
the soil.
“We should wait until we see crop color and growth before deciding
to add additional nitrogen, if the full amount has already been
applied,” he says. According to the nitrogen rate calculator, corn
following soybean should be supplied with about 180 lb nitrogen per
acre in southern and central Illinois, and about 170 lb nitrogen per
acre in northern Illinois (soil organic matter provides the rest).
If nitrogen still needs to be applied to the crop, these rates
should be used, taking care to apply fertilizer properly to avoid
loss and crop injury.
If June ends up being as wet as May, producers may want to go back
with another 30 to 50 lb nitrogen in the two or three weeks before
tasseling, especially if growth and yield potential are good. “The
crop itself is a better indicator of its nitrogen status than soil
or tissue samples,” Nafziger says. “Having the crop take on a dark
green color in mid-vegetative stages tends to indicate that it
doesn’t need more nitrogen.”
Q: Should we adjust seeding rates or make other agronomic changes
when planting this late?
A: Not for corn, Nafziger says, unless the initial target was to
plant more than 38,000 to 40,000 seeds, in which case seeding rate
should be lowered. For soybeans, the idea that narrow rows and
higher seeding rates will help compensate for smaller plants hasn’t
been fully supported by research, but it certainly makes sense to
avoid low stands and the potential for incomplete canopies during
seed fill. “We should have 115,000 to 120,000 plants regardless of
planting date, and we should plant to make sure stands are at least
that high,” he says.
Q: What about switching from corn to soybeans?
A: This is less an agronomic question than an economic one,
involving crop insurance, current crop prices, and how much has
already been invested in fields that were to be planted to corn.
Nafziger says corn is the answer when considering corn prices
relative to soybean prices; the fact that corn will not be planted
as intended in some places (such as flooded river bottoms); and the
fact that in some places in recent years corn planted in early June
has yielded well. “It’s not an automatic decision to switch to
soybeans when planting late like it might have been a few decades
ago,” he notes.
Q: Is there any possibility that we could end up with good yields
despite the start?
A: Trendline yields for corn and soybean in Illinois in 2019 are
about 190 and 67 bushels per acre, respectively. “It’s too much even
for an optimist to hope that actual yields in 2019 will reach those
levels, but if we get the best weather possible—no temperatures
above normal and not too many days below normal—and no lack of soil
moisture ever during the growing season, we might hope to see yields
in the vicinity of 90% of those trendline yields. Even that is an
audacious hope, but we haven’t tested today’s hybrids and varieties
under such conditions in the past five years, and we can hope to be
surprised at what they can do,” Nafziger concludes.
[News Source: Emerson Nafziger,
217-333-9658, Commercial Agriculture Educator, University of
Illinois Extension] |