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Effect of an upper temperature threshold on heat unit calculations, defoliation timing, lint yield, and fiber quality in cotton

Crop managers need to determine the most profitable time to defoliate cotton
(Gossypium hirsutum L.) in a high rainfall environment such as the coastal region of
Texas. In cotton production, delaying defoliation exposes open bolls to a higher
probability of rainfall, and thus, reduces lint yield and fiber quality. Premature
defoliation, however, has detrimental affects on lint yield and fiber quality.
A more recent method to determine defoliation is based on heat-unit (HU or
DD15) accumulation after physiological cutout or five nodes above white flower
(NAWF=5). Results have been inconsistent across a wide range of field environments
when utilizing HU accumulation past cutout; therefore, adoption of this method has been
limited. Many regions of the Cotton Belt have maximum day time temperatures during
the growing season that are above optimum for maximum growth.
Field studies were conducted for three consecutive growing seasons in the Brazos
River Valley and Upper Gulf Coast regions of Texas. The purpose of this research was
to identify an upper temperature threshold (UTT) for calculating degree days for
defoliation timing. The experimental design consisted of a split-plot design with four
replications. The main plots consisted of three upper temperature thresholds (32°C, 35°C, and no upper limit) and the subplots were five HU timings (361, 417, 472, 528,
and 583) accumulated from date of cutout.
Utilizing an UTT to calculate daily HU failed to explain differences in the
optimum time to defoliate based on accumulated HU from cutout for the upper
thresholds investigated. Accumulated HU had a significant impact, however, on
defoliation timing. Comparison of the two locations showed that maximum lint yield
was obtained at 472 HU and 52% open boll at Wharton County versus a maximum of
528 HU and 62% open boll for the Burleson County location. Employing the NACB=4
method to time defoliation at both locations would have resulted in premature
application of harvest aids and reduced lint yields. No differences were observed in
adjusted gross income values at Wharton County among the 417, 472, 528, and 583 HU
treatments. For Burleson County, adjusted gross income peaked in value at 528 HU.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1410
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsFromme, Daniel D.
ContributorsCothren, Joe Tom
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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