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Use of a Chlorophyll Meter at the Early Dent Stage of Corn to Evaluate Nitrogen Sufficiency
Author(s) -
Piekielek William P.,
Fox Richard H.,
Toth John D.,
Macneal Kirsten E.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
agronomy journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1435-0645
pISSN - 0002-1962
DOI - 10.2134/agronj1995.00021962008700030003x
Subject(s) - zea mays , automatic meter reading , chlorophyll , agronomy , mathematics , growing season , nitrogen , fertilizer , zoology , environmental science , metre , horticulture , chemistry , biology , physics , organic chemistry , astronomy
A late‐season chlorophyll meter test for corn ( Zea mays L.) could provide growers with a convenient evaluation of that year's N management program, along with information useful for N fertilizer rate decisions in subsequent growing seasons. Chlorophyll meter (SPAD 502) readings were taken late in the growing season on corn ear leaves in replicated plots of 357 N treatments from 93 N‐response experiments conducted in Pennsylvania. At sites not affected by severe late‐season drought or disease, chlorophyll meter readings taken at the 1/4 milk line stage separated N‐deficient from N‐sufficient treatments with 93% accuracy using a critical level of 52.0 SPAD units. If meter readings were normalized at each site by comparison with a site‐specific high‐N reference reading, chlorophyll meter readings of ear leaves made from the late milk to the middent stage of corn could separate N‐deficient from N‐sufficient treatments with 92% accuracy using a relative SPAD reading critical level of 0.93. For treatments with meter readings below the critical level, relative grain yields and the additional N that would have been needed for economic optimum grain yield were correlated with chlorophyll meter test values. For treatments with a meter reading above 52.0 SPAD units, the amount of excess N that may have been applied could not be accurately predicted. For corn tested at the 1/4 milk line stage, we suggest an N‐sufficiency range of 52.0 to 56.0 SPAD units, above which there is a 70% probability of an excess of >50 kg N ha −1 having been applied.

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