194-2 Underground Water Use and Peanut Production: Effects of Sowing Date and Initial Soil Water Availability.

See more from this Division: C03 Crop Ecology, Management & Quality
See more from this Session: Management of Bio-Energy and Other Crops
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Lower Level

Ignacio Severina1, Julio L. Dardanelli1, Daniel Collino1 and Maria E. Otegui2, (1)National Institute of Agricultural Technology of Argentina, Manfredi, Argentina
(2)FAUBA-IFEVA-CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) production in Argentina takes place in a region of (i) monsoon climate and average rainfall of 539 mm during crop cycle (November-March), (ii) variable levels of plant available soil water (PAW) at sowing, and (iii) water deficit during the period of pod set (R3-R6.5). The objective of the present research was to study the effect on aparent rooting depth velocity (ARDV, in cm day-1) and on rate of water uptake (K, in mm mm-1 day-1) of (i) contrasting evaporative demands produce by sowing dates (early on 21-Oct and late on 2-Dec, in the main plots),  (ii) different levels of underground (60-200 cm soil depth) PAW (30% and 70%, in the subplots) from R3 (start of pod growth) onwards, and (iii) two cultivars of contrasting cycle duration (short Asem and late Florman, in the sub-subplots). ARDV was affected only by PAW, and reached 2.34 cm day-1 at 70% PAW. Reduced PAW promoted a delay in ARDV, which caused a reduction in (i) maximum rooting depth (250 cm for 70% PAW and 150 cm for 30% PAW), and (ii) soil depth for maximum water extraction (i.e., soil dessication to permanent wilting point). Values of K were maximum for all treatments up to 70 cm soil depth. Beyond this depth, K values were affected by treatments; maximum rates corresponded to 70% PAW at the late sowing date, for which maximum biomass production was obtained up to R3. The smallest K values were registered for cv. Florman growing with 30% underground PAW in the early sowing date. Differences in K between cultivars growing with 30% PAW may be related to differences in root density in response to assimilate production and soil strength.