Better Farming Ontario May | 2024

44 Story Idea? Email Paul.Nolan@Farms.com Better Farming | May 2024 PLATINUM SPONSORS HOSTS SILVER SPONSORS riskmanagement.farms.com/yieldtour #ONYield24 Save the date for the nal events! August 22, 2024 Chesterville August 29, 2024 Woodstock Moe’s Market Minute crop growth was slowed during days when wildfire smoke was intense over the crops. We spoke to many agronomy experts based in the U.S. Midwest, including those associated with the universities in Iowa and Illinois. The cropping year of 2023 had a hot and dry start in May and June, but the smoke and wildfires from Canada during the growth phase seemed to have had perfect timing for adding yield potential. Dr. Fred Below, plant physiologist from the University of Illinois, concluded that the lack of diseases and the fact that crops received all their nutrients contributed to the higher-than-expected yields. Dan Quinn, a corn extension specialist from Purdue University, said that haze and reduced air quality from wildfire smoke can result in both negative and positive impacts on crop growth. A negative impact is a reduction in light availability and solar radiation, which can reduce crop photosynthesis. Wildfire smoke in the atmosphere can reflect portions of incoming sunlight, thus reducing the total amount available to plants. Reductions in light availability tends to impact C4 plants like corn as it has a higher light saturation point (the point at which further increases in light do not increase photosynthesis). Soybean plants are more susceptible to changes in CO2. The second negative impact from wildfire smoke is an increase in ground-level ozone. Wildfires can emit various air pollutants that can form ozone when reacted with sunlight. Ozone can cause harm to both corn and soybeans by entering the plant through the stomata and causing harm to plant tissue during respiration. Since both reductions in sunlight and increases in ozone can cause photosynthesis reductions, corn may also be inclined to remobilize carbohydrates from the stalks later in the season to satisfy grain fill requirements, thus increasing the potential for weak stalks and lodging prior to harvest. Wildfire smoke can also scatter or diffuse sunlight and allow light to penetrate deeper into the crop canopy and increase plant photosynthesis. When direct sunlight is reduced, it can also lower the temperature and give the corn plant a breather and benefit plants under crop stress. Lower leaf temperatures can lower the amount of transpiration (water movement and evaporation from the plant) needed to cool the plant and reduce overall water stress as well. Kevin Kalb from southern Indiana, who won first place in the 2023 Conventional Non-Irrigated National Corn Growers Association category with a 425 bpa corn yield, admitted that he did not have the ideal weather

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy NTc0MDI3