Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast China

Abstract Maize sowing in semi-humid region of Jilin province is often delayed beyond the optimum planting time window because of soil water stress typically occurring before or during the planting season. Research was conducted at Lishu city, in Jilin province from 2009 through 2010 to determine the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fulai Ke, Xinglin Ma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-08-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-95328-5
id doaj-617376f08e5f4899aea52848e47b75aa
record_format Article
spelling doaj-617376f08e5f4899aea52848e47b75aa2021-08-08T11:21:52ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-08-011111910.1038/s41598-021-95328-5Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast ChinaFulai Ke0Xinglin Ma1Institute of Crop Science, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS)Institute of Crop Science, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS)Abstract Maize sowing in semi-humid region of Jilin province is often delayed beyond the optimum planting time window because of soil water stress typically occurring before or during the planting season. Research was conducted at Lishu city, in Jilin province from 2009 through 2010 to determine the responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date. Three popular hybrids with contrasting different maturity, short-season hybrid Jidan27, mid-season hybrid Xianyu335, and full-season hybrid Zhengdan958 were planted in early May and mid-May and thinned to populations of 67,500 plants ha−1. The results showed that durations from emergence to silking stage for all the hybrids consistently shortened as the planting delayed, but interaction effects of hybrids, planting date and year existed for the duration of silking to physiological maturity stage. The longer maturity hybrid usually had grain yield advantage over earlier maturity hybrid when planting at early May, but the earlier maturity hybrid often showed a greater yield than longer maturity hybrid when planting was delayed. The highest yield occurred at the treatment combination of the mid-season hybrid and delayed planting date, and the shorter season hybrid typically showed stable and higher grain yield across planting dates. Changes in grain volume per unit of land area among hybrids and planting date treatment combination were consistent with the changes in grain yields, indicating that the yield is determined usually by the sink capacity. Further research is needed to evaluate the effects of hybrids maturity and planting date on maize under different planting densities.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-95328-5
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fulai Ke
Xinglin Ma
spellingShingle Fulai Ke
Xinglin Ma
Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast China
Scientific Reports
author_facet Fulai Ke
Xinglin Ma
author_sort Fulai Ke
title Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast China
title_short Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast China
title_full Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast China
title_fullStr Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast China
title_full_unstemmed Responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in Northeast China
title_sort responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date in northeast china
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Maize sowing in semi-humid region of Jilin province is often delayed beyond the optimum planting time window because of soil water stress typically occurring before or during the planting season. Research was conducted at Lishu city, in Jilin province from 2009 through 2010 to determine the responses of maize hybrids with contrasting maturity to planting date. Three popular hybrids with contrasting different maturity, short-season hybrid Jidan27, mid-season hybrid Xianyu335, and full-season hybrid Zhengdan958 were planted in early May and mid-May and thinned to populations of 67,500 plants ha−1. The results showed that durations from emergence to silking stage for all the hybrids consistently shortened as the planting delayed, but interaction effects of hybrids, planting date and year existed for the duration of silking to physiological maturity stage. The longer maturity hybrid usually had grain yield advantage over earlier maturity hybrid when planting at early May, but the earlier maturity hybrid often showed a greater yield than longer maturity hybrid when planting was delayed. The highest yield occurred at the treatment combination of the mid-season hybrid and delayed planting date, and the shorter season hybrid typically showed stable and higher grain yield across planting dates. Changes in grain volume per unit of land area among hybrids and planting date treatment combination were consistent with the changes in grain yields, indicating that the yield is determined usually by the sink capacity. Further research is needed to evaluate the effects of hybrids maturity and planting date on maize under different planting densities.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-95328-5
work_keys_str_mv AT fulaike responsesofmaizehybridswithcontrastingmaturitytoplantingdateinnortheastchina
AT xinglinma responsesofmaizehybridswithcontrastingmaturitytoplantingdateinnortheastchina
_version_ 1721216054551642112