Jarrod Miller, Extension Agronomist, jarrod@udel.edu

Unless you planted corn later in June, and some people appear to have made that choice, cornfields across Delaware should be into the reproductive stages. The easiest reproductive stage to decipher is probably R5, which is the dent stage (Figure 1). As corn grains dry down, moisture loss causes a dent near the crown as the kernel shrinks a little. Prior to dent you must estimate liquid in the kernel to determine whether you are in blister, milk, or dough stages. A guide to grain fill stages can be found here: https://www.agry.purdue.edu/ext/corn/news/timeless/GrainFill.html.

Figure 1: Corn in dent stage planted on April 24th in Georgetown, DE.

The dent stage is typically reached at 2190 to 2450 growing degree days (GDD), which most corn planted in April has reached. The ear in figure 1 was planted in Georgetown on April 24th, which is between 2196 and 2277 GDD. For the temperatures this ear has seen, the kernels look fairly good, with minimal aborted grains. Through July, temperatures were often above 87°F during the day and sometimes 72°F at night, which can cause the plant to stress during pollination and grain fill (Figure 2). Corn planted later in May could have seen some relief in the last week as kernels have pollinated and started to fill. Only scouting will tell how the weather has interacted with your planting dates.

 

If you planted -> April 14 April 21 Apr 28 May 5 May 12 May 19 May 26
Sussex 2368 2277 2196 2095 1995 1924 1785
Kent 2312 2220 2145 2064 1966 1901 1766
New Castle 2219 2132 2052 1980 1889 1829 1696

Rainfall has continued to benefit the northern end of the state, with both Newark (21.5”) and Dover (18.8”) leading the state in total rainfall since April 14th. Smaller rainfalls have contributed a little to soil moisture in Georgetown, Dagsboro and Delmar in the last week. However, dryland fields in the southern part of the state were hit hard during grain fill, and the results may show up in September. The southern end of the state has received about 5 inches less than the Newark region, so hopefully you kept the irrigation running.

 

Figure 2: Temperatures Across the State

 

Figure 3: Delaware Rainfall Accumulation

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