IEM Daily Feature
Thursday, 08 August 2013
Thursday, 08 August 2013
Reaching 2600 GDDs
Posted: 08 Aug 2013 04:41 AM
Growing Degree Days are commonly used to track crop development. For
"105 day" corn, about 2600 GDD units are necessary to reach maturity.
The cool and wet spring combined with a early May snowfall made it
difficult for corn to get into the ground on time in Iowa. Planting
corn deep into May and June puts the crop at risk of not accumulating
enough GDDs prior to the fall freeze. The featured chart attempts to
provide probabilities of accumulating GDDs based on the combination of
growing season begin (planting / crop emergence) and end (first
freeze) date. The left hand plot shows the overall frequencies based
on yearly data for Ames since 1893. The right hand plot combines what
has already happened this year with scenarios based on all previous
years for 7 August and on. For example, for a corn crop emerging on
15 May, about 20% of the years got to 2600 GDDs by 15 September prior
to the first fall freeze. Given this year's condition, for a corn
crop emerging on 15 May, there is near no chance that 2600 GDDs can be
reached by 15 September and only about 50% of all years will get us to
2600 GDDs at all. One mitigation is that as planting dates get later,
farmers will plant hybrids with shorter maturities (less GDD
requirements). Although, this seed change is not always logistically
possible. The chart would indicate that we need to make it through
much of September without a freeze to give the longer maturities a
chance.
Voting:
Good = 152
Bad = 11
Tags: gdd 2013
Voting:
Good = 152
Bad = 11
Tags: gdd 2013