Excerpt from the
Agronomy Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service
Institute of Food
and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida
Irrigation
Peanuts
grow well on sandy soils and are somewhat drought tolerant at certain
growth stages. There are critical stages of growth that require higher
levels of soil moisture or yields can be limited along with quality and
lower grades. Table 3 shows four growth stages and the relative
response of the plants to moisture during each stage.
The period
of greatest water use occurs during pegging and is necessary to move Ca
through soil solution to pegs and developing pods.
Peanuts are
the least susceptible of any of the row crops in the Southeast to
drought at planting since they will emerge from two to three inches
deep if necessary. However adequate moisture is necessary for good,
uniform stands.
Mid-season nut development is the most critical
time for irrigation if there is a shortage of rainfall since it is the
stage of maximum water use by the plant. In the Southeast the critical
part of the development/fruiting period includes the latter part of
July, August, and the first week or so of September.
Irrigation
in the first two months after planting is usually not needed unless
extremely dry conditions persist, because excess moisture can trigger
excessive vine growth.
Irrigation in late September may result
in excessive moisture during the peanut maturity stage and can increase
the severity of CBR, Sclerotinia blight, and leaf-spot diseases.
In
dry years, irrigation can suppress the outbreak of spider mites and
lesser corn stalk borers, make digging operations easier and reducing
the threat of aflatoxin contamination.
Table 3. Critical periods for soil moisture for peanuts.
Week of Growth
|
Growth Stage
|
Water Requirements
|
Week 1 to 2
|
Planting to emergence
|
Moderate
|
Weeks 3 to 8
|
Emergence to pegging/
flowering
|
Low
|
Weeks 8 to 15
|
Flowering/pegging and pod
formation
|
High
|
Weeks 16 to 22
|
Pod formation to maturity
|
Moderate
|
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