Journal of Integrative Agriculture (Dec 2012)
Relationship Between the N Concentration of the Leaf Subtending Boll and the Cotton Fiber Quality
Abstract
This experiments were conducted in Nanjing (118°50′E, 32°02′N) and Xuzhou (117°11 ′E, 34°15′N), Jiangsu Province, China, to study the response of fiber quality to the N concentration of the leaf subtending boll in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). Results suggested that the N dilution curve of the leaf subtending boll can accurately indicate the stage-specific plant N status for fiber development. Fiber strength is likely to be the most variable fiber quality index responding to the leaf N variation which is different in cultivars. Fiber length was the most stable index among strength, length, micronaire, and elongation. There existed an optimum leaf N concentration for fiber strength development in each stage. The optimum leaf N regression curve was very close to the N dilution curve in the middle positional fruiting branches under the 240 kg N ha−1 soil N application rate.