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Growth and yield of maize at different altitudes in Rhodesia
Author(s) -
WILSON J. H.,
CLOWES M. ST. J.,
ALLISON J. C. S.
Publication year - 1973
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1973.tb01311.x
Subject(s) - altitude (triangle) , biology , dry weight , dry matter , horticulture , irrigation , crop , effects of high altitude on humans , agronomy , zoology , botany , geometry , mathematics , anatomy
SUMMARY A late (SR 52) and an early (N × K) variety were grown, with irrigation, on well fertilized soil at three sites, Chiredzi (altitude 420 m), Henderson (1260 m) and Grasslands (1620 m). Mean incoming radiation was similar at all sites, while mean temperature decreased as altitude increased. Final total and grain dry weights were greatest at Henderson, and those of SR 52 exceeded those of N × K, although not greatly at Chiredzi. Initially, leaf area index (L) decreased with increase in altitude, but plants flowered later as altitude increased, and L at the time of flowering was greatest at Henderson. L at flowering was greater in SR 52 than in N × K, though only slightly so at Chiredzi. Leaves withered sooner after flowering at Chiredzi and Grasslands than at Henderson, but leaves of the two varieties withered at about the same time after flowering at each site. During most of the vegetative phase the efficiency of the leaves and crop growth rate (C) increased with decrease in altitude, and were greater in N × K than in SR 52. More dry matter was accumulated after flowering at Henderson than at the other sites, and more by SR 52 than by N × K at Henderson and Grasslands, but not at Chiredzi. Leaf area duration (D) after flowering was greater at Henderson than elsewhere, and greater in SR 52 than in N × K, except at Chiredzi. After flowering leaf efficiency (dry weight increase ÷ D) was least at Henderson and greatest at Grasslands, but differed little between varieties at each site. The fraction in the grain of the dry matter accumulated after flowering decreased with increase in altitude and was greater in SR 52 than in N × K.

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