Plant Production Science (Jan 2016)

Physiological characteristics of high yield under cluster planting: photosynthesis and canopy microclimate of cotton

  • Ting-ting Xie,
  • Pei-xi Su,
  • Li-zhe An,
  • Li-shan Shan,
  • Zi-juan Zhou,
  • Zhong-ping Chai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/1343943X.2015.1128088
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 165 – 172

Abstract

Read online

Cotton produces more biomass and economic yield when cluster planting pattern (three plants per hole) than in a traditional planting pattern (one plant per hole), even at similar plant densities, indicating that individual plant growth is promoted by cluster planting. The causal factors for this improved growth induced by cluster planting pattern, the light interception, canopy microclimate and photosynthetic rate of cotton were investigated in an arid region of China. The results indicated that the leaf area index and light interception were higher in cluster planting, and significantly different from those in traditional planting during the middle and late growth stages. Cotton canopy humidity at different growth stages was increased but canopy temperatures were reduced by cluster planting. In the later growth stage of cluster planting, the leaf chlorophyll content was higher and the leaf net photosynthetic rate and canopy photosynthetic rate were significantly increased in comparing with traditional planting pattern. We concluded that differences in canopy light interception and photosynthetic rate were the primary factors responsible for increased biomass production and economic yield in cluster planting compared with the traditional planting of cotton.

Keywords