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Published online 1 March 1973
Published in Agron J 65:307-310 (1973)
© 1973 American Society of Agronomy
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Water Relations and Growth of Cotton in Drying Soil1

Betty Klepper, H. M. Taylor, M. G. Huck and E. L. Fiscus2

Two 70-day-old cotton plants (Gossypium hirsutum L. ‘Auburn 7-683’) were subjected to a 26-day drying cycle at the Auburn rhizotron in order to quantitatively study water relations and growth of both root and shoot as the soil dried. Measurements were made of rooting density changes; stem diameter and height increase; and soil water content (neutron meter), soil water potential (thermocouple psychrometer), and plant water potential (pressure chamber). Marked diurnal flurtuations in plant hydration and soil water potential were observed, especially during the middle of the drying cycle. Plant height increase and stem diameter growth slowed drastically after 17 days even though 35% of the root system was in soil wetter than –1 bar and the plant was rehydrating to a water potential of –3 to –5 bars. Plant water potential in the early morning did not equilibrate with the water potential of the wettest horizon of soil.

The pattern of rooting with depth shifted during drying; initially, there were more roots in the upper layers of soil but, as a result of death of old roots in the top layers and production of new roots in the lower horizons of soil, rooting density increased with depth by the end of the drought. Cotton plants grown at the same time in a similar profile that was maintained moist did not show this reversal in rooting density.

Key Words: Diurnal • Irrigation • Roots • Transpiration • Water potential • Stem diameter


1 Contribution from Department of Botany and Microbiology, Auburn University, in cooperation with Soil and Water Conservation Research Division, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, and Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station, Auburn, Ala. 36830.

2 Assistant Professor, Department of Botany and Microbiology, Auburn University; Soil Scientists, SWCRD, ARS, USDA, and Research Associate, Department of Botany, Duke University, Durham, N. C., formerly of Auburn University, Auburn, Ala.

Received for publication July 5, 1972.





HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
The SCI Journals Crop Science Vadose Zone Journal
Journal of Natural Resources
and Life Sciences Education
Soil Science Society of America Journal
Journal of Plant Registrations Journal of
Environmental Quality
The Plant Genome
Copyright © 1973 by the American Society of Agronomy.