Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T09:21:22.276Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Investigations on yield in the cereals: IV. The action of the seed drill

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

F. L. Engledow
Affiliation:
Plant Breeding Institute, School of Agriculture, Cambridge.

Extract

A regular optimum spacing among plants is the theoretical ideal. Regularity is difficult to secure and the ever varying optimum is not determinable. But earlier investigations have shown that field crops of corn are marked by extremely high fluctuation in population density along the rows of plants; and further, that in this fluctuation lies an important limitation to potential yield. Wider knowledge of this limitation is being sought. The experiments have clearly confirmed plant density fluctuation as a characteristic of field crops (of wheat). Measures of this fluctuation and analyses of its nature and causes are the subject of the paper.

In relation to plant development and yield, fluctuations in density or spacing from point to point along the row, are the most important features associated with drill action. These have been measured by counts, both of seeds and of plants, on unit lengths of row. Such “census” counts are described in detail for four normal fields. Plant counts were made periodically. In general a unit length of one foot of row was adopted. For analytical purposes the refinement of a per-inch count proved necessary.

Fluctuation in seeds deposited per foot may be illustrated by the data from one of the fields. The mean was 18·0 and the standard deviation was 7·2. In aggregate the field could be regarded as consisting of five equal portions (quintiles of the per-foot distribution) for which:

Number of seeds per foot = 5·0–12·2; 12·2–15·0; 15·0–18·0; 18·0–22·3.

Equivalent seeds rates (bushels per acre) = 1·42; 2·00; 2·35; 3·11; 3·70.

The distribution per inch, determined by a specially devised method, is illustrated for two fields in Diagram I. Four equal aggregates (quintiles of per-foot distribution) from one and the same acre had the widely different seedings displayed in Diagrams II and III.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1928

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

(1)Engledow, F. L.A Census of an Acre of Corn (by Sampling). Journ. Agric. Sci. 16, 1926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(2)A Census of an Acre of Barley. Journ. Roy. Agric. Soc. Eng. 87, 1926.Google Scholar
(3)The Trials of Corn and Seed Drills. Journ. Roy. Agric. Soc. Eng. 73, 1912.Google Scholar
(4)Journ. Nat. Inst. Agric. Bot. No. 6, 1927.Google Scholar
(5)Hunter Smith, J. and Rhys Williams, H.A Census of an Acre of Roots. Journ. Min. Agric. 34, 08, 1927Google Scholar
(6)Engledow, F. L.Investigations on Yield in the Cereals. II. A Spacing Experiment with Wheat. Journ. Agric. Sci. 15, 1925.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(7)Greenwood, Major and Yule, G. Udny.An Inquiry into the Nature of Frequency Distributions representative of Multiple Happenings with Particular Reference to the Occurrence of Multiple Attacks of Disease or of Repeated Accidents. Journ. Roy. Stat. Soc. 83, Pt. II, 1920.CrossRefGoogle Scholar