Abstract
Proso millet (Panicum miliaceum L.) is a short-season, drought-tolerant C4 species capable of making use of limited available water supplies and is suitable for dryland crop rotations in the Central Great Plains. Previously published water use/yield production functions for proso millet have slopes lower than reported for other C4 species in this region. The objectives of this experiment were to determine the water-limited yield relationship for proso millet and to identify environmental factors that cause yields to be lower than predicted by the water-limited yield relationship. Water use and yield data were obtained from a long-term crop rotation experiment conducted under dryland conditions in northeast Colorado from 1995 to 2016. Stepwise linear regression analysis was used to determine important environmental factors influencing yield. The water-limited yield relationship had a slope consistent with other C4 species in this region (32.57kgha−1 per mm of water use). A relationship based on growing season water use, plant available soil water at planting, precipitation received from 12 to 18 August, number days in July and August with maximum temperature greater than 36°C, daily average wind run and maximum wind gust during the week before swathing explained 88% of yield variability. The results of this analysis suggest that closing the yield gap for proso millet production could likely result from efforts to breed for enhanced shattering resistance and heat tolerance and from production methods that improve precipitation storage efficiency during the non-crop period prior to millet planting and increase available soil water at millet planting.
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