Emergence and growth of corn and soybean under saline stress

Authors

  • Flávio Favaro Blanco Embrapa Meio Norte
  • Marcos Vinícius Folegatti USP; ESALQ; Depto. de Engenharia Rural
  • Hans Raj Gheyi UFCG; CTRN; Unidade Acadêmica de Engenharia Agrícola
  • Pedro Dantas Fernandes UFCG; CTRN; Unidade Acadêmica de Engenharia Agrícola

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162007000500001

Keywords:

Zea mays, Glycine max, salinity tolerance, soil solution

Abstract

Emergence and seedling growth may be severely affected by salinity, mainly for sensitive crops. The objective of the present study was to verify the tolerance of corn and soybean to the irrigation water salinity (ECi) during the emergence and initial development stages. Seeds of corn, hybrid 'AG-6690', and soybean, cv. 'Conquista', were sown in pots containing material from a sandy-loam soil and irrigated with water of increasing salinity levels, from 0.3 to 5.9 dS m-1, giving nine levels of ECi obtained by the addition of an equivalent proportion of sodium and calcium chloride, except for ECi = 0.3 dS m-1 (tap water). Emergence of corn was not affected by salinity but seedling development was reduced for ECi above 1.5 dS m-1. Emergence and growth of soybean were reduced by water salinity and the crop was more tolerant during the emergence (ECi = 2.7 dS m-1) than in the initial development (ECi = 1.0 dS m-1) stage. Salinity of soil solution (ECs) was linearly correlated to ECi and affected the growth of corn and soybean for ECs higher than 3 and 2 dS m-1, respectively.

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Published

2007-10-01

Issue

Section

Agricultural Engineering

How to Cite

Emergence and growth of corn and soybean under saline stress . (2007). Scientia Agricola, 64(5), 451-459. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162007000500001