COTTON GROWING IN THE NEW REGIONS OF THE USSR

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CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6
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RIPPUB
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R
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338
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December 22, 2016
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March 16, 2012
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2
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Publication Date: 
March 13, 1952
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REPORT
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 tIESTRICIED S OFT &~ COTTON GROWING IN THE NEW REG FIRST COLLECTION INuTrnJE FOR SCIENTIFIC PESEARCH ON COTTON GROWING, DEPARTMENT OF GRICULTUP~AL TCHNOLOGY IN THE NEW REGIONS OF THE USSR. A Gosizdat for KolkhoZ and Sovkhoz Publications, NoSCOw and Leningrad. 193L. . .. , . . ____ IN THE NL'W FcEGIO'NS RESULTS AND PROSPECTS G G4T2WING ' -_--ri--- T. I. KVITKO RESULTS OF THE DEVEWPMENT OF COTTON GROWING IN THE NEW REGIONS. Attempts to introduce the cotton plant into the new regions ion. The reason for this lay in the social and economic structure Revo lut cation growing in the new regions remained undecided until the October i.c war. But the question a.s to the possibility of large-scale aaist new regions continued intermittently up to the outbreak of the imperi_ of Dagestan. From 1888, planting of cotton at different points in the canon was planted by separate farms in villages located on the plains biL.ty of cotton growing in the South Ukraine commenced. In the 1880's decade of the 19th century the first preliminary studies of the possi- ~ Cri.mea, are noted at the end of the 19th Century. During the second sowings of cotton in Terek, North Caucasian Kray, and in Kerch, in the 'icultlvato cotton' in Astrakhanskiy Kray. The first experimental began at an ea.riY date. In the 17th Century measures were taken to of Czarist Russia; price regulated the development of the national ur to invest his funds, using as his starting point the market prene economy. It was by virtue of price which caused each private entre- nd in whatever branch afforded him the possibility of obtaining a dema Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 IRICTEU large profit in a short time. Market conditions in Czarist Russia were such that cotton grown in the new regions could not compete either with cotton from Central Asia nor with that from America, produced under conditions of i ntensif ied exploitation of labor in both the latter cases - of the Dekhans in Russia and of the Negroes in America. This is why all attempts to introduce cotton growing into the new regions during the pre-revolutionar.Y period met with failure. Only under the conditions of the planned Soviet economy did large-scale commercial cotton growing become possible in the new regions. In its historic resolution of July 18, 1929 "Qn the Develop- ment of Cotton Growing", the TsK of the UKP(b) pointed out the need for "taking more decisive measures to develop cotton growing in the new areas (Dagestan and North Caucasus) and to expand the experiments in cotton growing (Ukraine, Crimea, Astrakhan) by widespread distri- bution of the proper varieties of early maturing seed, by granting insurance against crop failure and conferring other advantages, so as to bring the total acreage under cotton in the new regions up to 200,000 hectares by the close of the Five Year Plan, .F~ As a result of the accomplishment of the Party resolution, the new regions scored a major victory on bhe cotton front, expressed in the clearest way by the very significant increase of the acreage under cotton, The Party's direc~ive to expand cotton acreage in the new areas to 200,000 hectares by the close of the first Five Year Plan was thus over-fulfilled by more than 50 percent, as may be seen from the table, 'raa1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 (1 i1 IRIC TED large profit in a short time. Market conditioru in Czarist Russia , were such that cotton grown in the new regions could not compete either c with cotton from Central Asia nor, with that :from America, produced under conditions of t ntensifi.ed expioitati.on of :tabor in both the :latter eases - of the Dekhans in Rus;3i.a and of the Negroes in America. This is why all attempts to introduce cotton growing into 'the new regions during the pre rcvoiutionary period met with failure. Only under the conditions of the pi.anrxed Soviet economy did large-Eacale commercial cotton growing become pos;3i.b1e in the new regions. In its historic reso:luti.on of July 18, 1929 "0n the Develop- rnerib of Cotton Crowing ", the TsK of the VKP(b) pointed out the need for "taking more decisive measures to develop cotton growing in the nc3W areas (Dagestan and North Caucasus) and to expand the experimenti in cotton growin (Ukraine, Crimea, Astrakhan) by wide ~3pread di.s tri- bution of the proper varieties of oar;l;y rnaturin.g seed, by granting insurance against crop "failure and conferring other advantages, 80 as to bring the total acreage under cotton in the new regions up to 200,000 hectare t~ by to close of the hive Year Plan. a' As a result of the accornpiishment of the Party reso1uti.on, the new regions scared a major victory on the cotton front, expresf3ecI in the clearest way by the very significant incre~r.se of the acreage under cotton. The Party's direc t,ive to expand cotton acreage in the now areas to , 200,000 hectares by the close of the first Five Year Plan was thus ov'ex-fu:LCi1ied by more than 0 percent, as may be seen f'rorn they table. dESfaiCTEfl Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 IIESI RIOT ED The movement of cotton acreage in the socialized sector shows that this sector has played a dominating role here since the very beginning of extensive commmercial cotton growing i n the new. areas. In 1930 it had 72,3 percent of all such acreage in the new regions, 93 percent in 1931 and 89.3 percentan 1932. The importance of this fact for the development of cotton growing` in the new areas was decisive. The sovkhozes, as the leading force in agriculture, were the pioneers in cotton growing on great tracts of land, and played a tremendous role in its development in the new regions. The population became convinced by the example of the cotton sovkhozes that cotton growing was possible and expedient, and took the first steps on the path of widespread commercial planting of cotton, The following table shows the total harvest of raw cotton in the separate krays and republics. TOTAL PRODUCTION OF LINT COTTON, 1928-1932 .. (in tons) RAYON 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 Dagestan 55 210' 167 3,891 5,080 North Caucasus 3ij. 3,187 5,819 29577 25jS38 Crimea .-w 9 275 51.02 2331 Former Lower Volga 2L 113 262 215 441 TOTAL FOR NEW REGIONS OF RSFSR 113 1,519 7,823 3115 h 33)71.10 Ukraine ww ~.. 1,323 336 251.81 TOTAL FOR THE NEW REGIONS 1,13E 1519 91L1.6 '? $651 5,621 RESTRICTED II Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The new cotton regions thus yielded 1I~5,050 tons of raw cotton ; rptt44 ryF, E~ a"{ to the country during the First Five-Year Plan, which made a practical Ott contribution to the fulfilment of the directives of the. Party and the a~ . , ., 1,1 government on the liberation of the textile industry of the ? USSR from n dependence on foreign countries, F It must be noted that the technological quality of cotton from the new regions is not orse than that of the old cotton regions. 1tThe strength of fabrics woven of cotton fiber from the new areas does not compare unfavorably with that of the usual factory assortment produced from Central Asian cotton, and sometimes excels it; in this respect variety Number 1306 showed a higher quality than the other selected varieties.' (From the report of the Cotton Sector of NITI for 1931.) . This quality refers to the cotton of the 1931 crop, when the Ukraine bolshevistically organized the cotton campaign, as a result of which the average yield in that year was about 3 tsentner per hectare from the total harvested acreage of 1L~1i.,500 hectares. In 1932 the textile industry commenced to note a certain 'deterioration in the thecnological qualities of the raw cotton from the new regions, which may be attributed to 'poorer tillage of the cotton fields here, which considerably increased the proportion in the total crop of lint picked after the frost, and exerted an unfavorable influence on its quality. Data on productivity, per wait area is also. of interest in any appraisal of cotton growing in the new regions.. The yield of lint. per f.~ 19`2 is given' in theJ following table. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The table shows a somewhat varied picture of the average pro- ductivity of cotton in the different krays and republics, In Crimea, Lower Volga and Ukraine, the productivity rises in some years and falls in others, while for the remaining areas it rises uninterruptedly throughout the entire period, reaching in 1932, 2,L. tsentner per hectare for Dagestan and 1.8 tsentner per hectare for. the ;North Caucasus, These yields, however, still appear low in comparison to the possible productivity of these areas. The cause of the low average productivity of cotton may be found not in unfavorable n atural conditions in the new areas, but in failure to fulfil the basic requirerrtent~caf cultural practice for cotton growing. This is emphasized by the data on the progress of ful- filment of cultural operations for this crop in 1931 and 1932. Of the extremely important breaches of sound technical procedure, which repeat themselves year after year in the new regions the following must be pointed out; the stubble from the preceding crops of wheatJ corn J etc. is not disked. into the soil before plowing, very little plowing lowing is done on the 'seedbed, preliminary tillage of the ground is very inadequate (light plowing and insufficient harrowing), and the sowing 2s unduly. delayed. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 YIELD OF LINT PER HECTARE, 1929-1932 (in Tsentner) RESTRICTED H ?YEARS A R E A 192 929 . 1930 1931 1932 Dagestan 0.5 0.6 1.17 1.52 2.I~, North Caucasus O.5 2d() 0.82 1.77 1. Former Lower Volga 0.3 0.7 O3 3.13 1.35 Crimea _,. 1,0 0.75 1.S7 o.86 Ukraine _.. 0.66 2.92 1.7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ' Cultivation, which is of decisive importance in securing high yields, is carried out ohly partially and broken off at the third stage. FULFILMENT OF CULTIVATION OPERATIONS (in percent) Stage of C,,, ---~ Two Year Average for 1931'1932 1931 1932 First Stage (to June 10) 51 bL L1.2 Second Stage (to lay 25) 15 31 10 Third Stage (to July 15) o o 0 Percent of acreage with . crop failure. 22 27 /ranslator ' s Note; the dates f'or the first and second stages are. either transposed in the text, or, what is more probable, the second stage should be June 25 instead of May 25.7 serious breaches of sound technical procedure, a normal yield cannot be expected if the three compulsory cultivations are carried out in this fashion. All these circumstances, taken together, are responsible IJ for the high percentage of cotton acreage with crop failure (22 percent in 1931 and 27 percent in 1932) the diminished ~ productivity and the. deterioration in the cotton fiber as a result of the increased propor? tion of boils picked after the frost. What is the reason for these omissions ?in the field of cotton growing in the new 'regions? We must note in the first place 'the embittered resistance . of It is entirely . clear that e) en without considering the other RESTLUCTE ?RESTRtGTE Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 of workers among the permanent production brigades, the absence of personal or group responsibility for specific areas in cotton planting and the equalization of wages, which had a pernicious effect on the con- tinuing processes of cultivation. Production was also unfavorably in- fluenced by the ignorance of regional and local organizations, who did not understand the proper method of using state advances against cotton, in goods and money, as a means for stimulating the collective farmers to better tillage of the cotton fields; and even, in a number of places, criminally diverted cotton funds from their designated purposes. An immense amount of damage was also done to the development of cotton growing in the new areas by the opportunistic underevaluation of cotton in a number of rayons and MTS. Some workers of the krays, rayons and MTS adopted, the entirely incorrect view that cotton was a crop of the second grade, to which they owed less than to other crops. This was the origin of the neglect of the most elementary rules of cotton growing technique and the complete ignoring of mechanized methods of producing this crop by a large number of rayon organizations and MTS. Some.of the local workers try to justify this opportunistic under- evaluation of cotton by reviving the famous theory, long since buried as not corresponding to reality, that cotton growing is impossible a.nd una t profitable in the new regions. But they fail to understand that"we can- not look at profitability ma mercantile way, from the point of view a U I of a given moment. ` We must consider it from the point of view of the whole national economy, over a number of years.` Only such a paint of view can be called truly Leninist, truly Marxist,. And this point of view is obligatory not only in relation to industry, but, to an even greater degree,, in relation to kolkhozes and sovkhozes !' (Stalin). Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Krasna~ ~Boyets" D y~ Y , Leninets"Simferopol r Skiy 128 i 1 1 it it +' Y ( J~ L r~ . r \ 1(r A t a (t1` YI s ,I1l~r~rli~~i it ~-~M ~~~I~a ~~~~I?~~~~~k~~~~~,~~~~~~I~ i +~~; y N d',t,igSEP..dlf'a,. ,fYR~ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 iiESTRICTED The data,from the experiment statiorns located at different points in the new regions emphasizes the high yields that are possible with proper management. Such stations have consistently obtained yields. ranging from 10 to 15 tsentner per hectare, year after year for a number of years, from very considerable acreages. These possible yields are emphasized as well by data from hundreds of kolkhozes that have obtained lint yields ranging from 3 to 9 tsentner per hectare. Thus, in Ukraine, the average lint yield in 1931 was 2.92 tsentner per hectare for the total planted area of i)44,500 hectares; but a number of ko1khozes obtained yields two to three times higher than this average. (in Tsentner per. Hectare) 1931 1932 r W Q) rd (I) H H cj Cu ~-4 ~i Q) Name of Kolkhoz Rayon 1 (3) -Ti:) ( (6) DAGESTAN "Kra.sniy Pakhar" Achikulakskiy 20 L.6 75 3.3 nVsem Druzhba" Shelkovskoy -w --- 225 ).~.5 "KrasniY Partizant'`Baba-Yurtovskiy -- --- 35 5~9 . . :. NORTH CAUCASUS' KRAY "Zavet I1' icha" Mozdokskiy 600 )i.0 160 "Krasniy Sunzhenets" . it tr "Krasniy Oktyabrt,' Petrovskiy F +r.Oktyabr 1 Pxikumskiy CRIME Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 "Perebulova't Golopristanskiy 1!.0 800. X25 Pyatirichkatt Skadovskiy 876 8.0 ..-- ...~ t?peremoga," Kakhovskiy 279 5.2 ...~- Tn 1933, which enjoyed less favorable meteorological conditions for cotton than the preceding years, a number of k olkhozes that cones scientiously tilled their cotton fields obtained excellent yields. Thus, for instance, in North Caucasus, the k olkhozes of the Arzgir MTS harvested 2,918 hectares in cotton and obtained yields ranging from I4 to7 tsentner per hectare; the kolkhoz "Krasniy Suzhenets" in Mozdok- skiy Rayon harvested 280 hectares and obtained a yield of 10 tsentner per hectare from its 20 hectares in cotton. In the Ukraine, the Skadov Khlopkosovkhoz had 1j..9 hectares in cotton, which, being tilled properly yielded 5.8 tsentner per hectare. different koikhozes in the cotton zone of the new areas, with different climatic conditions, and for different years, prove thattkt is entirely possible to obtain satisfactory unit yields of cotton in the new regions, in any year, without irrigation and at a considerably lower labor cost than 'in the irrigated areas. These data completely destroy the opportunistic unbelief and the theory of the well-known saboteur Zaytsev, the agronomist Bushuyev and their followers to the effect that cotton growing in the new areas is scientifically fantastic, since the natural environment does not meet the biological requirements of the cotton plant. (1) ' (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) UKRAINE It follows from all that has; been said above that cotton is becoming entrenched in the new areas. A new and mighty cotton producing Thus these selected data on, the productivity in raw cotton in TRIG TRICTE 11 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ESTR1CTEU base is being established in the new 'areas of the south'. of the European ;Y part of the USSR, to supplement the main cotton.base cf the USSR in Central Asia and Transcaucasia. Today thenost northerly' cotton growing the world is being carried on in the new areas of the USSR, where in the cotton plant has advanced up to the 18th parallel of north latitude, while in most of the old cotton growing regions of the world it is dis- tributed between the Llst and l~2nd parallels. The successes achieved in the development of cotton growing in the new a.rea.s are consequences of the following: (1). The fundamental social and economic reconstruction of the agriculture of the new regions, on the foundation of the widespread development of the sovkhoz construction, the gigantic groth and stren hteni of the kolkhoz movement, end the liquidation of the kulaks ~' ~' s which allows reconstruction based on solid and unbroken as a class collectivization. The new cotton areas, consisting of North Caucasus, Crimea; the former Lower Volga and the Ukraine, are the advanced areas of solid collect za.tion in the USSR, in which the collectivization of peasant ~.v'~. was substantially completed by the end of the first Five Year f arm~.ng Plan. (2). The increasing technical equipment of the sovkhozes, and also of the kolkhozes through the MTS, based on the far-reaching, success in the industrialization of the country has aided development of the cotton growing industry. (3). The determined struggle against the opposition.of the class enemy to the introduction of cotton growing in the new areas, and against the opportunistic disbelief ?n its possibility has been a ' ,., B Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 lIES TRIC Tt The existence in the new 'areas of immense tracts of land suitable for cotton growing without capital investment in irrigation works is a great advantage. As a general rule it is unirrigated cotton growing that is being expanded. The achieve lent of cotton growing in the new regions takes on special significance in theight of the unprecedented crisis through which cotton growingin the capitalistic countries is passing. During recent years, the acreage and harvests of cotton have been uninterruptedly declining in all the capitalistic countries. Thus, for instance, in the United States, the cotton acreage in 1932 was cut down by 1,000,000 hectares to 1L,500..,000 hectares from its level of 18,500,000 hectares in 1929;and an imense number of farmers were ruined. In British India, cotton acreage in 1932 was down by 2,100, 000 hectares to 8,100,000 hectares against 10,500,000 hectares in 1929, In Egypt, cotton acreage dropped in 1932 by 315,000 hectares to J59,000 hectares against 7.7Li.,000 hectares in 1929. ~ In the capitalistic countries, cotton growing has been chased. into a bland alley; curtailment of cotton acreage is proceeding, and the working masses are being impoverished. In the Soviet Union, cotton growing is expanding, new areas are being conquered in the struggle with nature, andthe standard of living of the broad masses of workers and collective f arners is being raised to a higher level. Here are the two sets of consequences which have resulted fromthe activities of two dixferent systems; the socialist and the capitalist. tIES TRiO TED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 help in 'the expansion of the industry. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 R~~~rkm~tl.~~sr~ ()4). The existence in the new areas of irnriense tracts of land suitable for cotton growing without capital. investment in irrigation works is a great advantage. As a general nrle it is unirrigated cotton growing that is being expanded. The achieve --lent o f cotton growing in the new regions takes on special significance in the3'ght of the unprecedented crisis through which cotton growinj n the capitalistic countries is passing. During recent years, the acreage and harvests of cotton have been uninterruptedly declining in all the capitalistic countries. Thus, for instance, in the United States, the cotton acreage in 1932 was cut down by L4,000,000 hectares to lL~,500.,000 hectares from its level of 18,500,000 hectares in 1929;and an imense number of farmers were ruined. In British India, cotton acreage in 1932 was down by 2,100,000 hectares to 8,L~00,000 hectares against 10,00,000 hectares in 1929. In Egypt, cotton acreage dropped in 1932 by 31$,000 hectares to L59,000 hectares against 77La,000 hectares in 1929. In the capitalistic countries, cotton growing has been chased into a blind alley; curtailr~aent of cotton acreage is proceeding, and the collective fara~rers ;S bang raised to a higher level. Here are the two nature, andy the standard of living of the broad masses of workers and working masses are being impoverished., In the Soviet Union, cotton growing is expanding, new areas axe being conquered in. the struggle with sets of eonsequences.which have resulted frornthe activities of two i'fe$nt systems; the socialist $.nd the capitalist. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 iESTRICTEO Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 east of Greenwich. The great diversity of the physical and geographical conditions in the zone and the specific nature of the climatic end soil requirements of cotton are responsible for the distribution of the cotton districts in the .form of separate and distinct oases, frequently separated from each other by immense distances. tween )41 and 18 degrees north latitude and 31 to ~O degrees longitude Cotton has been grown commercially in the wide zone of the new regions in the south of the European part of the USSR, located be- The location of these cotton-growing districts in the new regions is as follows: The Dagestand district embraces the level portion of the re- public, lying along an extensive stretch of the Caspian shore. It is divided into a northern steppe zone and a southern zone, which is more or less elevated and runs in the form of a narrow belt between the sea and the dissected relief of the foothills. The Azov-Black Sea cotton district adjoins the Black Sea and rather indeterminate, and large-scale planting of cotton is being carried out in the approximate area of Slavyanskaya Station. data of experimental plantings, cotton growing is possible an this In the northern part of the Azov-Black Sea Kray, there is a district along the Don River, 'between Konstantinovskaya and.Tsymlyan- skaya Stations, immediately adjoining the unirrigated cotton-growing Rayons of Stalingrad Kraye. According to analyses of the climate and Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The North Caucasian cotton district acuppies a rather extensive territory, and includes the Mozdokskiy, Vorontsovo-Aleksandrovskiy, Prikumskiy, Vinodelenskiy, Petrovskiy, and Blagodarnenskiy Rayons. On the south it merges into the level portion of the Chechin between the terek and Sunzhey rivers. The Stalingrad cotton district is composed of two parts: the irrigated cotton region, located in separate areas on the lower course of the Volga from the sea to Stalingrad, and the unirrigated cotton region, which is situated further- north, adjoining the River Don and embracing the Nizhnechirskiy and Koteltnicheskiy Rayons. The cotton zone of the Oradea takes in only the flat central part of the peninsula, from the western shore of the Black Sea to the Kerch Strait on the east. The northern boundary of the cotton zone of the Crimea runs from Ak-Mechet' on the west to Ak-Chekrak: Biyuk-Onlar, Ichki and thence along the railroad to Kerch City. Its southern boundary runs from the village of Nikolayev to Bulganyk, Sarabuz, Dzhalaby and through Old Crimea to Feodosiya. The Ukrainian cotton district lies to the south on the shores of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, and extends from the western frontier of the USSR eastward 'to approximately the ]ongitude of Mariupol'. Its northern boundary runs 'eastward from Zel' d to Severinovka, N. Odessa, Vladimirovka, and from there runs along the left bank of the Dnepr to V. Rogachik, descending thence to S. Terpeniya,then running in a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 fIESTRICTED In their climate' the new cotton areas belong to the semi-arid and arid zone of the USSR. In spite of this it should be noted that what is least available in the new areas is not water for the cotton plants, but heat. Thus, in the.extrernely arid year 1929, when most of the crops of the Tarrian peninsula literally burned up, the cotton fields "looked like green oases" and gave excellent harvests. On the other hand, in 1933 which was a very wet year, the development of the cotton crop was delayed in consequence end its productivity reduced. The soil cover of the new cotton areas of the RSFSR and Ukraine is characterized by the prevalence of chestnut chernozems and chestnut soils of various shades, loamy in composition. In the downstream areas of the Unepr sandy loam soils of alluvial origin are prevalent (Golopristanskiy and Skadovskiy Rayons), which are more favorable for cotton. The preference is usually given to the loam and sandy loam soils, which are lighter in mechanical composition and more easily warmed through and are thus more favorable for cotton growing under the conditions of the new areas. There is no uniformity among the cotton districts we have men- tioned with respect to the degree to which natural conditions favor the development of cotton culture. In connection with this the Fifth Conference for Cotton Culture in the New Regions held in 1932, in its resolution divided the cotton areas into three groups or subzones, accor- ding to the degree to which cotton growing was favored by natural con.. ditions, and on the basis of actual production to date: _ r "To the first .group belong the areas which are unquestionably cotton areas and have the highest and` least fluctuating productivity of cotton, and in which cotton is already' the ]e ding crop. ES TRIG I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 b. To the second group belong the areas which are also un- questionably canon areas,but have a lower ..productivity than the areas of the first group. C. To the third group belong the areas with low and unstable pro- ductivity of spring crops, but with obvious primacy of cotton culture." zone is distinguished fronhe other two subzones by The first wub its higher temperatures, longer growing season anal, abundance of sunlight, which is very vnportant for the development of the cotton plant. Ex- perience has. shown that in this subzane cotton culture gives the highest and least fluctuating 1 y ields, if harvested. at the proper time. A greater proportion of the cotton is ripe for harvesting before the the better textile qualities of the lint. frosts, which accounts for Cotton growing is most widespread in the regions of the first subzone. Natural conditions are less favorable in the second subzone, but sufflci ? nt to obtain a satisfactory yield of lint. Cotton has a e cultivated f ield.s of this subzane. The third conspicuous place on the and has a shortened growing season. Cotton culture subzane is coolest, , here has a subordinate place aniong the other crops, with present tech- niques and varieties, and is confined to relatively small acreage, on the lighter sails and on southern slopes.; mainly METHODS OF INCREASING COTTON PRODUCTIVITY "The central task of the Second Five Year Plan should be the roductivity,of sovkhoz and kolkhoz fields" p . decisive enhancement of the (from the re5olut' on of the 17 Party Conference). There are very con's' technical prerequisites for the fuifilment of this siderable material and While the cotton culture, of the new ..task in the ..new .cotton regions. IIESTRICTEB Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 tEST RICIED ., w rr: --i (1) Petrovsko- e Elagodarncye Divnoy e ProkhladnaYa E NaurskaYa 1 Khasav-Yurt v Makh - 1 ach gala 1 Achikulak Kperson Latitude Longitude Elevation latitude 2414.3l4 Longitude 1tIt?39 Elevation 106.0 Latitude 36.38 Longitude 32,88 Elevation /6, S Furnished for these stations by the GIDRONETBYURO of Dagestan Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 (2) Latitude .23 Longitude 2.52 Elevation Latitude 5 Longitude 243.30 Elevation Latitude 245.51 'Longitude 13.21 Elevation Latitude ` 6 c~3. Longitude 24)4.01 Elevation 199.0 Latitude 24)4.246 Longitude 24)4.240 Elevation 118.5 Latitude L3.15 Longitude 246.36 Elevation 115.0 Latitude 9 Longitude .247. . 31 Elevation 32a0 } 192)4 - 1931 j (3) 1925 - 1931 1925 - 1931 1 1925 - 1931 1921 - 1931 1926 - 1931 1912 - 193 1891 - 1930 from 1896 and from 1911 to 1930 1905 - 1930 -3.8 -3.6 1.2 -3.9 -2.b .2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 -6.3 -5.9 -6.1 -3.2 (5) -6.1 -5.6 0,1 0.9 1.7 0.1 0.2 1.2 0.8 3.2 3.8 1.0 2.6 10.0 18.0 8.9 19.E 9.2 18.0 8.5 17.7 $.b 17.2 10.2 18.2 10.2 16.6 21.7 20.5 21.3 19.4 21.1 20.24 21.1 22.0 21.2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 17.3 11.14 17.0 10.8 16.8 10.9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 (9) (lo) (11) (~.2) (13) (11I) (15) 21.3 2I~.1 it. O 17.3 11.4 I9.l 23.8 23.5 17.0 10.8 2 bI6) L 2 2.O 16.8 10.9 4.9 20. li 23.2 23.6 17.5 9.9 !~. 8 21.1 23.9 23.8 17.5 10.1 1~.6 22.0 250 21~.8 18.3 .1z5 21.2 , 2tt.o 23.5 17.9 11.8 6.0 21.7 21.9 2li.9 19.3 13.7 7.1 21.9 25.1 21~.l, 18.0 20.6 5.5 7 16.6_ `20.5: , 23.1 21.9 - 16.9. 10.1 14.7 -0.5 10.01. . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R0001 002 10002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Kh. Sennoy Tsimlyanskaya . Poltava Feoc3,osia Prikurnsk Naunskaya Figure 3. MONTHLY PRECIPITATION AT TYPICAL FOINTS OF NETY COTTON AREAS in that area is grown under irrigation. The reason for this i s that on the Ukrainian seacoasts, though precipitation is light, the atmospheric humidity is usually high and sumniers are cool, while swnrner in iJagestan is very dxy, even though temperatures are very- high. Undoubtedly the eastern dry winds, which are more prevalent in Dagestan than in the Ukraine, also play a prominent part. On the Kalmyk steppes and in the Lower Volga Kray, unirrigatea cotton culture is doubtful at pointswith precipitation under 300 millimeters and with very hot and dry summers. IESTRICTE,D Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 PRECIPITATION DURING THE 1~5.-YEAR PERIOD SINCE 1885, IN (According to data of KRAYGIDftOIETBOp1ITETA of North Ca Divnoye YeYsk Kit -ar Krasnodar 1~?~akhach-Ka1-'}} 1_ a ozdok M I _.aurska QI. _glno Petrovsko ye Taman' February March April 35 30 31 12 2!3 16 16 20 26 ~ 21 20 19 29 12 12 12 26 27 lb 23 23 20 17 gb 25 36 30 36 36 36 - 28 - 26 31 12 12 12 30 16 - 27 27 37 13 13 17 2!~ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 36 36 42 33 43 1~6 33 33 23 26 37 17 35 32 so 32 35 L~6 -l~2 39 31 39 32 29 _51 51 1.6 30 39 29 35 33 1~5 . 11 36 30 70 gp 75 59 60 3~ 39 1.6 tj1 51 1~?6 21 21j. 300 23 26 328 l, 39 15 21 295 31 31 386 25 25 316 41 56 512 t8 !i8 - 14i9. 21 18 Sod 32 27 536 20 24 337 2h 29 la77 1)4 18 360 2~t lg 431 58 52 576. 51 46 l~23 1~3 44 1,50 i4l 56 5ll Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 F DURING THE !S-YEAR ;PENSOD, SINCE 1$80, IN NiILLIMEETERS to data of %RAYGIDROKOMITETA of 'North Caucasus) Jii1 Au~ttst September October November December Annual Value (,o (11 12 28 25 _ 31 38 I2 33 21~ 18 33 33 26 20 i7 17 52 !~4 so 32 ! 30 ig b2 39 )~6 27 , 32 29 38 79 I.i b6 36 46 29 35 57 42 36 30 30 21 75 59 h8 38 3b 2h 20 67 52 h3 33 _tc7 36 147 22 >r2 1~2 36 26 63 46 52 140 3~ 30 17 51 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 }1ESiMcTED In consequence of the complexity of the physical-geographic conditions the a.sahyetal line$ of equal precipitation shown on the cli- ma.ta.c map represent a very interesting pattern. The mountains exert their . the increase of precipitation, and therefore in Crimea influence toward . aucasus the higher valued isohyetal lines show marked dis- and. the C placement towards the north. The dry winds in the east reduce the pre- ipitataon, and therefor e the lower valued isohyetal lines bend sharply c and turn west. The influence of the wands overcomes the influence of the sea between the Don and the Stavropol) highlands, where these low asohyetal1ines proceed further in a westerly direction. The winds, travelling further, then form a belt of reduced precipitation in Northern ~. Ukrainian littoral. The isohyetal line of X00 millimeters Crimea and. the forms a closed curve in the western cotton district, enclosing the entire Ukrainian cotton district, hail' of the Taman Peninsula and the Crimean cotton districts. In the eastern part of the cotton areas, the also hyetal lanes of 300 a.nd X00 millimeters proceed southward in the northern section, but when they approach the mountains they turn to the east and proceed further along the parallels of a latitude. The isohyetal lane of 500 millimeters runs along the fo othill8 . of Dagestan and from the basin of the Kuban' River turns northward to Akhtari, and then descends steeply to reach the sea between Anapa and Novorossiysk. In Crimea COQ millimeters is noted only in a few points on the southern the mountains. Precipitation in the steppe part of Crimea shore and an is between 250 and L00 millimeters, while in the remainder. of 'North Caucasus Kray it is between lOQ and BOO millimeters, The n?wcoteon regions are thus. sufficiently supplied with precipitation, especially in summer, since mpst of it falls in June and ..... /ants need it the most. But this does not ex- July, when the cotton p t~1CTED i.8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 aEST RICT ED elude the possibility of prolonged injurious droughts, which appear. in allthe cotton districts without exception. Droughts in June and July are particularly harmful if accompanied by scorching dry winds. Droughts last as long as 137 days, as for instance in the case of the drought in 1929 on the Taman Peninsula, from April 26 to September 12, during which time less than 30 millimeters of rain fell. Droughts lasting from 60 to 120 days are observed on the Crimean steppes, and in Dagestan there have been droughts lasting 97 days. Atoll points there may be whole months entirely without precipitation, not excepting even relatively rainy places like Krasnodare The more arid zone, or as it :is customary to say, the seed- desert zone, is located in the northeast corner of the cotton districts in the fo rmer Sal'sk Okrug, in the northern parts of the former Stavropol' and. Terek Okrugs and on the Kalmyk steppes, where droughts may last 3 - L. and even 6 months. Droughts are often accompanied by dust storms that blot out the sun and carry dust in whole clouds for hundreds of kilometers. The wind sometimes tears away the upper plowed layer of the topsoil and scatters the plantings over very great distances. The average frequency of droughts is as follows: droughts of 15 - 20 days occur every year, of 30 - LSO days, every three years,and over 140 days, every eight years. However, not every drought is harmful for cotton. If it lasts for 20 or 30 days in August and September and is not accompanied by dry winds, it is even beneficial' to the cotton plant. As an example of a ha.x iful drought we may cite the drought in all the cotton districts that lasted from the middle of July to 10 August 1930, when the temperature reached 42 degrees, the humidity fell to 15 - 20 percent, and wind velocities reached' 10 - 1S me tern per second. In f1ESTRICTID yy~}'yytl ph~rqni~!~,a ~ d .~}' I',f. j( '-t ~ F Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 this drought the cotton plants lost most of their buds, ovaries and leaves, a phenomenon which wa.s especially marked in Prikumskiy Rayon, Drought is the principal scourge for all crops in the new cotton regions and therefore the struggle with it should be vigorously waged in all the districts using all posdble methods, even including artificial rain-making. Violent downpours and rainy spells during the growing season are also harmful to the cotton plant, especially if accompanied by mists, slight cold drizzling rains or completely overcast skies. The cotton plant needs sunshine and gloomy weather stunts its development very much, delaying germination in Nay, delaying ripening in August and September, and retarding the opening of the bolls in September and October. Besides this, prolonged dryness may cause the bolls to rot. Severe downpours also damage the cotton plant, particularly during the period of germination. In June, July and August, however, as was obsered in 1931, they do no particular damage. As an example of exceptional rains, we may mention the one which occured on 5 July 1931, when 118 millimeters fell in Prikumsk during a. single day (2) hours), in August of the same year 12~ millimeters fell in Slavyanskiy Rayon. To judge by the data of many years covering, in some cases, as many as 36 years, these,.instances apparently represent the maximum diurnal rainfall. in the cotton regionse Such diurnal rain- There are sporadic` downpours every year, but, they usually, do no: damage, if unaccompnied by storms a.nd hail. Sight hailstorms, occur almost every year, with insignificant.damage., but large hailstones killing 70 - 100 percent of the cotton plants fall no oftener than every 1 o 20 years. w ~ ;, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Among the favorable meteorological factors should be mentioned the abundant sunlight in a.l1 the cotton areas. In the western districts the mean number of sunlight hours during the growing season reaches 1700 - 200, in the eastern districts 1600 - 1900 hours, and in Dagestan 1500 - 1700 hours. The most insolated points are Yevpatoriya, Feodosiya, Akhtari, Anapa, and the Taman' Peninsula. Ukraine, Prikumskiy and Priterechniy Rayons are somewhat less insola;ted, but in any case sunlight is entirely sufficient. The mean number of sunlight hours during the summer is from 9.5 to 11.5 in the western districts, or from 75, to 90. percent of the possible number of sunlight hours, while this proportion is 65 to 80 percent in the eastern districts and somewhat lower in Dagestan. The detailed. distribution of winds is till insufficiently studied. When we refer to winds, we mean the direction and velocity, both of which are usually observed by meteorological stations at alti- tudes of 9 - 12 meters. No data at all is available on wind conditions at the level of the cotton plant, since they have never been observed. However, wind velocities at these levels are considerably lower. Strong winds are very damaging to the cotton plant., and may do mechanical damage during.. the seedling period, as the plants are still not streng- thened; during the blooming period winds may damage the flowers;. but the most damage maybe done during the ripening period, when thf,,wind can unravel` the lint and scatter it over a whole field. Strong, iris furious winds of lit to 20 meters per second occur at all seasons of the year and visit each point two or three times a year. if they are dry Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 tSTRLCTED. of-the winds. It is clearly shown on the climatic map how the isohyetal lines and the lines of equal frost-free periods bulge to the west under the influence of these winds. The winds reach the Sea of Azov and are usually especially strong near Akhtari. Then, crossing the Sea of Azov, they cool the northern part of Crimea. Climatic con- ditions become worse over all this expanse and are somewhat less favorable: than in the places to the south (south of Tikhoretskaya). and to the north (north of the Don). Cotton is therefore not widely cultivated here. The lowest wind velocities are noted in Krasnodar and Slavyanskaya, where the mean annual velocity is 3.2 meters a second and the mean velocity /ossibly printer's error for "mean summer ve1ocity"7 is 2,5 meters a second. , To recapitulate, we may arrange the cotton regions in the following order with respect to favorability of climatic conditions: very Favorable; Taman' Peninsula, Anapskiy Rayon, Naurskaya and the part of Mozdokskiy Rayon below the Terek, the central part of Dagestan, Yevpatoriyskiy, Feodosiyskiy and Lenin$kiy Rayons in Crimea, the left bank littoral part of Ukraine between Skadevsk and Genichesk (very wide at Skadovsk, very narrow in Khorlovskiy Rayon and somewhat broader again towards Genichesk). These areas are characterized by frost-free periods of 200 to 225 days, mean annual temperatures of 10 11 degrees and annual precipitation of 250 to L6o millimeters, with most of it falling during the sumu~er. The first halfof autumn is dry and warm, and there are no.killing frosts in May or September. Strong winds and the possibility of. drought belong on the negative side of. the balance sheet. Favorable; In the Ukraine; the belt from nchakov through Nikolayev,' ....... Kherson and Melitopol' to Nariupol'. In West Caucasus: Slsvyanskiy Rayq4 `h arts of Primorsko?'Akhtarsltiy and Yeyskiy Rayons, Tsyin1yanskiy ~ESiRiCTED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 1iESTRICTED Rayon and many places in Dagestan. The frost=free period is 180 to 200 `. . daYss the mean annual temperature is 9 - 10 degrees, and the annual. precipitatlon 350 500 millimeters, with most of it falling during the summer. Killing frosts are very infrequent and insignificant in May, autumn is cool, with possible rains, autumn killing frosts begin on the average about October 120 Least. Favorable; that part' of the Ukraine mrth of the L 7th parallel, the Don cotton district from Beshenskaya to Kamyshin, Krasnodarskiy and Timashevskiy Rayons, the northern rayons the former Stavropol.' Okrug 'vne ..v~ skiY and Proletarskiy Rayons), the northern part of Dagestan, and (D~. the elevated parts of the mountainous regions. The irrigated cotton regions (Lower Volga and Dagestan' are very rich in summer heat and have a sufficiently long frost-free period; 170 to 180 days in Astrakhan and 220 to 250 days in southern Dagestan. Summer rains are trifling in amount - less than 100 millimeters in stralchan'- but are very considerable in Dagestan - 300 to X00 milli- A meters. We may say in conclusion that meteorological science has not yet spoken its last word on the question of the posibility of cotton growing in the new regions. Though this question may be more or less settled for the large continuous cotton districts, things are considerably less clear with respect to separate details, and we may still find separate territories and separate tracts, mare or less considerable in size,which can be used for the further development of cotton growing, as we have seen in the example of the Don cotton district. dESTRICTED S)4' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ESTRICTED In the general complex of meteorological factors,taken as a whole, sDme climatic defects, such as temperature, for instance, may be compen- sated by others, such as humidity, sunlight and so forth. It is therefore entirely probable that the cotton districts will be con- siderably expanded in the near future. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 COTTON AND WEATHER IN THE NEW AREAS (A report to the VI Con- ference for Cotton Growing in the'New'Areas, held at. Prikumsk in July, 1933.) by S.. D. Iysogorov The dispute as to whether cotton growing is possible in the new areas and in particular, in the Ukraine, which occupies the. northern- most position among the cotton areas in the world, has lost all basis and practical significance by now, for during the last few years cotton has assumed a firm position here as one of the leading crops, and its acreage is counted in hundreds of thousands of hectares. In areas where, according to the formulas of the saboteur Zaytsev, the cotton boils could not possibly open under any circumstances before the autumn frosts, it has been shown possible to obtain, year after year, very reliable yields of lint of the order of 5 to 8 tsentner per hectare, and higher. Fro his it is clear how comp]etely unfounded it is to mechanically apply conclusions about the relation of cotton growing to climate, con elusions obtained under the conditions of the old cotton regions, to regions where the totality of climatic conditions is sharply contrasted with those of the old areas and where cotton growing, moreover, is based on entirely different and peculiar methods of agricultural tech- nology. The interest aroused by the clarification of the behavior of cotton under the climatic conditions of the new areas is thus entirely natural, and an evaluation of the probable. productivity of that area among them which is leash supplied with heat (Ukraine) is likewise lIES TRICTED 6- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R0001 002 10002-6 flWf? - important, since heat is indisputably the factor -among all other meter?I orological elements which is most potent to limit the practical economic possibilities of cotton culture. It may therefore fairly be awaited that here, of all places, in these territories where we have conquered nature and won new fields for cotton growing, the dependence of its cultivation and productivity on meteorological factors should be most clearly and concisely explained. The practice of cotton growing in the new regions including: the Ukraine during the past few years, has very definitely demonstrated that the primary prerequisite is not so much a matter of weather con- ditions as it is of agricultural technology., For failure to meet the fundamental demands of agricultural technology is the reason for in- stability of yield and sometimes even crop failure, and in genera,, for the immense gap between the size of actual cottom crops and the size of those which the weather and other natural conditions here would permit us to obtain. .Itis cur urgent task for the near future to aiquidate this gap and reach a high productivity with the aid of the accomplishments of science, a task of which the solution lies in the organizational economic and political strengthening of the sovkhozes and kolkhozes. But the significance of meteorological factors in cotton growingis still very great, even where the demands of agricultural technology are met.. conditions and on the individual components of that totality must be carefully sketched in detail against the background of u niform agri- The dependence of cotton growing on the totality of meteorological ES TRIOTED iE$1 i'gi U a k Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 tESTRtCTEO. cultural technology, consistently maintained from year to.. year. And the same must also be expected even where sowings of cotton'are made at different periods within the same year. Experimental sowings of cotton have been made since 192 in the northern zone of the New Cotton Areas on the territory of the Ukrainian Zonal .Station Kherson). Data is thus available covering a period of 8 to 9 years, and it already allows us to draw very definite and valuable practical conclusions in a number of instances as to the relation between the productivity of ` cotton and the meteorological conditions of the year. . Among these eight to nine years there are some with vividly contrasting meteorological conditions, and contrasting as well in their respective productivity of cotton. This is' -a premise favorable to the elucidation of the relations and interdependence which are of interest to us. It must however be remembered that a connection so manifested does in all instances necessarily prove to be the result of a causal not sequence. Two phenomena are not infrequently asE.ociated only by ex t - ernal linkage, and simultaneously bear a causal relation to a third phenomenon. Comparison among themselves, with respect to meteorological con' ditions, of entire growing seasons or of their separate sta.ges,each of considerable length, such as for instance germination-flowering, -flowering or `f lowering-ripening, could not reveal many critical budding moments in the life of the cotton plant. For this reG:son the statistical method of analysis of the correlation between climate and growth must necessarily be supplemented by direct experiment to clarify the relation of growth to the specific meteorological factor being investigated. RESTRICTED w.8 w i Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Work with the vegetative and laboratory-field methods of agro- meteorologyis just` starting' to develop, so that ma number of cases the conclusions to be presented below must be 'regarded as only first approximations. The characteristics of the correlation between weather and cotton growth in the new regions are of greatest interest in the data from the Ukrainian cotton planting zone, since this is the northernmost of the new regions. In complete accord with the findings in the published literature on cotton (tysenko, Miroshnichenko and others ), a very close correla- tion has been observed under Ukrainian conditions (at Kherson) between rapidity of onset of various phases of development of the cotton plant and the temperature, the Fiore rapidly does the cotton plant traverse the stages of its development, the sooner does the onset of maturation arrive. The truth of this statement has been demonstrated in general in all cases under investigation, by analysis of the weather and by analysis of the results of cotton sowings at different .periods of the sarne year, and it is also true for each stage in the life of the cotton plant, taken separately, as is apparent from the following table There as the.same close and regular correlation between the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 development of'the.cotton,plant end soil temperature year the , shorter' the period of ; ^development of the cotton plant from sowin ;to; natu?city; ;wi;th.::;var ety,;lb9'athe length of ~thispexiod fluctuates ,between ar~120and 172 sdays according totemperature conditions, or a A12IGSPHERIC TENIPERA7[TRE AND THE LENGTH OF THE GROWING SEASON OF THE COTTON PLANT Coefficient of ea~rsl925 1926 1927 1928 1929 193 1931 1932 Correlation Mean temperature from nnination to blooming. 20 22 22.7 21.2 21.0 18.1 22.6 21. ~ ?9 ~ 3 rs, Number of days between csgermination and blooming 97 67 61 68 63 87 56 61~ ..tee -Mean temperature from E rriblooming to opening of the bolls Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 1Lt.2 17.6 , 23.E 19.2 26.2 '17.3 23.1 2.1. Number of days between blooming and opening of the bolls S8 66 lt5 54 43 56 54 54 0 O Mean temperature between planting and opening of the bolls. 18.? 19.7 21,3 _ 20.3 22.L~ 19.0 21.5 20 Number of days between. planting and opening of the bolls 172 11t3 127 133 120 164. 130 133 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 -0.66 = 0.13 -0.77 = 0.09 -a?9L. = 0.03 v Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 This regularity noted in the cotton literature, however, proves on more detailed analysis of the data to be confirmed only in general. Instances of very considerable deviation from this regularity are by no means infrequent. Thus in a series of experiments with plantings of variety 1306 at different periods in 1932 the following results were obtained: Days to Mean Temperature Aggregate Temperature Date of. Planting Budding During the Period During the Period August 1 L~.8 21,1 degrees 1012 degrees May 30 L.2 20.9 degrees 880 degrees . It will be,seen from this data that cotton planted August 1 took 6 days longer to reach the budding period than that planted May 30, in spite of the higher mean temperature and the considerably higher aggregate temperature during the later period. The reasons for this are partially revealed by analysis of the conditions ofthis experiment. Number of Days Number of Days with Maximum with Minimum Temperature Temperature Relative Humidity Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Date of Planting over 30 degrees under 13 degrees at 1300 hours August 1 17 13 10.8 percent May 30 0 2 56.l. percent The delay in budding; is evidently?connected with the sharp up. F 1 ward and. downward deviations from, the mean 1n the diurnal march of temperature, as well as with the reduction in relative humidity during. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 In another experiment with variety 1306 in 1931, the following were obtained: June 19 30 ? 2. i 733 l5 2 7 July 2 29 25.9 752 21 6 6 (Note: Low minimum temperatures did not occur) Number of Number of Number of days with days ~d.th days with, Maximum Maximum Relative Temperature Temperature Humidity Number of Mean Date of days to Temperature Aggregate over 30 over 35 under 35 Planting Budding During Period Temperature Degrees Degrees Percent .-~._.- ------ Cotton planted on, July 2, though it enjoyed a mean diurnal temperature 1.5 degrees higher than that of the earlier planting of June 19, still took almost the same time to reach the 'budding stage. The relative retardation in the bearing of the July 2 planting must apparently be attributed to the extreme increases of temperature during the daylight hours. Obviously temperatures over 30 degrees, and s in the meteorological according to the readin d booth do no accelerate, but rather tend to retard, the march of the processes connected with the formation and appearance of buds. The injurious effect of high temperatures is even more apparent from the results of a1931 experiment on Variety 1306 (at Kherson): egrees perhaps over 35 g Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 FIESTRICTED Mean ,Number of Temperature Date of days to during the Aggregate Planting Budding Period -- -- - Temperature May 30 33 22.2 733,1 June 9 L~1 23. 958.0 Number of days with Maximum Temperature over 30 degrees 7 16 Number of days with maximum Temperature` Mean over 35 relative degrees Humidity 0 6o. o 59.9 The retarding effect of high temperature is alst Confirmed by experiments performed in 1932 by the vegetative method of P. A Yakhtenfel' d. Increasing the temperature of the air in the i mmediate proximity of the plant above 35 degrees and-brin in it g g up to 40 degrees already resulted in marked retardation of the transition of the caftan plant to the reproductive' st&te'and noticeably increased _ the ha.eght of the first sympodium. (See the periodical Za. kadyan'sku Bavovny, Numbers 10 - 12 of 1932, "The Bavov Vernalization", by P. A. Yakhternf el a.) Frequent and sharp temperature increases to the limits when they begin to retard the development of the cotton plant do not appear to be characteristic of the new cotton regions, On the contrary, it is the weather in the old regions that manifests an abundance of high reM Larding ternpera.tures to a very considerable degree, as is apparent from the long-term data for maximum temperatures 'at Kherson and maxima for shorter periods at Tashkent. In spite of the fact that the absolute maxima are given for Kherson, while for Tashkent only the maxima are given for the periods of observation, which are usually lower : that the absolute maxima, these data still who sharp rises in temperature to be customary in T ash - kent. Thjc TEJY Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ESTRICTEO MONTH POINTS APRIL MAY JUNlia JITLY AUGUST SEPTEMBE OCTODER Kherson 28.7 3~.5 39.8 38.5 38.8 36.0 32.0 L. A. Molchanov, "A Contribution to the Question of the climatic Regional Distribution of the Cotton Areas' (in Numbers S 6 of Khlopkovoye Delo for 1925). In the development of the cotton plant the phenomenon of the so-called temperature after-effect is observed. If high effective aggregate temperatures are accumulated during the early stages, then the later stages are able to proceed with lower aggregate temperatures, and conversely; thus in 1930 Variety 1306 required a total aggregate temperature of 968 degrees for the completion of the phase "blcomin g to ripening", in spite of the relatively low temperature of 17,3 degrees during this period, while in 1931 the same phase took an aggre- gate temperature of 12L.6 degrees, though this period, with a. mean temperatureof 22.3 degrees, was much hotter in 1931. One o f the main reasons for this phenomenon was that in 1930 a total of 1875 degrees of mean diurnal temperatures had already been accumulated, while the corresponding value in 1931 was only 1599 degrees. In consequence the phase ?Iblooming to ripening in 1930 took only as long as in 1931, in spite of the low temperature. It should not be thought, however, that this temperature com- pensation proceeds beyond the levels of supplementary heat which are actually useful to the cotton plant. This would be untrue even if o ~ only. ESTR!CTED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Tashkent3. 3) .6 X0.1 l~2.I !2.6 )2.O 37.6 3.7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 because the degree of reaction to any given factor may in general ' tant variations in other factors. But in addition vary with concoml to such variations, changes in the norms of reaction to temperature may also occur in consequence of the specific phenomena of conda.ta.ons after-effects. It would finally, be errcmeous to assume that plants necessarily with heat only under h igh levels of temperature. Thus become charged most of the "plantingato-bJ.oom~-ng? period was cool, in 1930, though there was still an increased. aggregate temperature before blooming. Accordingly the phase t'blooming=ta ripening" required a lower aggregate tempsrature9 that is, this phase proceeded at an accelerated tempo. But very low temperatures, if they occur on many days, can operate as an external factor to counteract this phenomenon completely arid. thus prevent its appearance, as was the case during the unusually cold year in 1933 in the Ukraine. The regularity reappears if ineffective temperatures are excluded' from cons ation. The correlation between the aggregate teraper7tures ~.de~r during the planting-to.germination and the germination-to-budding phases during the planting times of Variety number 1306 in 1933 was as follows Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 r1Mc*TEU. Excluding Excluding Excluding Excludin Excluding Temperatures Temperatures Temperatures Temperatures Temperatures C degrees of 10 De rees of 11 Degrees of .12 degreea of 13 degreel of 1~ Calculated g ..~..~_.... .-- as Usual and Below and below and below -and below and below ~p ? ~,1 0 ? h~. o.1 ~ 0.01 0.12 -0.01 ' Excluding Excluding Temperatures Temperatures of 15 degrees of 16 degrees and below and below -9,4 0.21. that is, the preparation far budding proceeds at temperatures above . 1$ degrees, and.. it is therefore natural that the exclusion of physiologa.ca.lly effective temperatures of 16 degrees should again reduce the inverse correlation. The phenomenon of temperature aftereffect is of more general occurrence than that of vernalization, since for instance cotton plants the budding stags under different temperature which have reached condltlons manifest different Stag es of preparation for blooming and r lower aggregate temperatures after budding therefore require higher o to reach the oJ.lowing stage of blooming, according to 1i ether. they have, . f , received lower a r higher aggregate temperatures before budding;.. The same is also observed with other periods. Confirmation is given by the . subjoined table, showing the coefficients of correla.tian between the aggregate temperatures of paired development stags in the life of the ` cotton plant. These talculations are based on data for various points . , ton regions, and the graph in Figure l (on page' in the new and old cat 39) vividly illustrates the car .relation between the aggregate temperatures necessary for growth during the vani ous periods of development. RFSiHl~TEO )y g14~rni~, j11F Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 . PERIODS -; Sowing to th leaf and i th leaf to budding ... Sowing to budding and budding to blooming ...,.... Sowing to budding and budding to ripening....... . Sowing to blooming and blooming to ripening. ...... Germinati?fl to budding and to blooming........ budding ~, Gennination to budding and budding to ripening. . . . . ... Gemination to blooming and blooming to ripening. ...... N cr1 O\ rt O N (tS r-{ ? c:h0 Q.. H4 to a) cj U) ?H :iU1 cD T9 ?r4 r! S~ ~N cr\c ? `~ o. -a cli ? ?H co .~ ~ O ? Cam- o NA ~ N NH U} N 0\ ~t r- Q) ?H rO b N ? co N O\.4 Ha) A Q O\ ~D H) D rH ?H \O rn ; ~ ca .,a U) r- O ?HI G '.O n ~+ c cd c~1 O ~ Gi c ? Z ~z ? O C H r1 cti ?r-I ~ r?i o - 4G ~ 4: T ~ W o U) c\ r-I N o Q} N Dc:: ?a) N{ O U) O O N , cd N Op S- ~H H .H H , ~ tJ 'f"I I r-i ?H U2 ~ ~ .. f p ma G) ? ) 'd 1) . ?H cYl c'J N qjQ (d i / y c x 1 o a\ c~ ci oD ryQ'~ }-1 cj cc j. ?-I F, H c~Z e%y ,~ ? R r ' z z .1 1-`-1 r w V J F+i ?H Y' N-4 r~n v -0.63 -0.35 -0.37 -0 . -0.73 -0.77 -0.65 -0.72 -0.88 -0.55 -0.30 -x.08 -0. [1 -0.59 -0.3)4 -0.52 -0.440 -O;87 he earliest dates with physiologically ineffective terPera:tures have been omitted in calculating the coefficients of correlation. . CORRELATION BE'IWEEI3 THE AGGREGATE TEMPERATURES OF TWO D1FFEkEPtT STAGES IN THE GROWING PERIOD OF THE COTTON PLANT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 roe: Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Thus the correlations between al 'hese pairs uniformly retain the minus sign and in a number of cases reach significant values. This inverse correlation between two different periods of development indicates that the actual amount of heat required by the cotton plant during a given phase of development i s not determined only by the nature of the plant itself, or only by the concrete circumstances of development during that particular phase, but is also determined by the conditions under which it developed up to the time in question, 'or this reason it is clear that the harmful isophase theory of Zaytsev, when applied to any period of growth, independently of the age of the . plant and of the preceding concrete conditions of development, is shown to be insolvent just as soon as it is applied to conditions radically different from those under which it was originally introduced. k The phenomenon of temperature after-effect, which appears under analysis by the method of graphic juxtaposition of "parallel ob- servations" and by statistical methods, demands verification by direct experiment, but it also demands the most intensive scrutiny and the undertaking o f special investigations (which have already y been initiated), inasmuch as further study of its nature might render possible the complete control of the growing season of cotton and the use of that control to increase productivity, fk {tl!~' eluE'.[ ~~ ix f 1 i ti~1?~~~a` ', ~i ;y~ ~114L. i .t?h );aa.. E y6 ~r, i,1~i +~zN}~~ i.av 9,~d~zti~l rrn,knE Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Aggregate o Tempera- ture in o Degrees ;iEstAicTEo Years of Observation Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Figure )4' Aggregate Temperatures During the Periods Germination-tom blooming and blooming to ripening, of the Cotton Plant, Shown in their Relation to each other. Soil temperature is also very important for the cotton plant. The works of K. V. Flerov and S. I. Yakubtsov (The Influence of Soil Temperaon the Development of Cotton, 193) have thrown light on this question. But the work of NOVNIKhI in 1933 showed the exceedingly great importance of the relation between atmospheric and soil temperatures for the development of the cotton plant. A great gap between these temperatures retards development, stunts growth and may even cause death of the plant. The optimum atmospheric temperature for cotton plant development is thus correspondingly reduced where soil temperatures are lower, which involves some readjustment in our appraisal of the temperature conditions in the new regions. This .is confirmed by the following results obtained in pot experiments at Prikumsk in 1933 with variety Number 1306. RESTRICTED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Date Date of Place Condition of Planted Budding 28.6 2l. I. 2L.0 20.3 20.E 20.0 It is very important for a fuller description of the correlation between development of the cotton plant and the temperature conditions, to discover, even though only approximately, what limiting temperature must necessarily be exceeded if the processes preceding the appearance of the reproductive formations (buds) are to take place, that is, the minimum temperature required for the stage of vernalization under natural conditions. It :i.s well known from the work of Comrade Lysenko that the processes of vernalization begin almost as soon as the seeds start to grows if the necessary conditions are present. It follows that if heat is sufficient, pas.?age through the stage of vernalization can commence urnnediatelY after planting and the swelling of the seeds, before seedling emergence. Thus by analyzing the data on planting dates we may learn what levels of temperature during the period between the two plantings result in retardation of budding and consequently what temperatures may be utilized in the preparation for fruiting in the vernalization process. . The fact that the actual temperature conditions between two budding begins, is also confirmed 'by the correlations established ` between planting and between the aggregate temperatures in the periods budding us, for instance,, the coefficient of correlation; . in each case. Thus, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Soil May 13 J,. une 2 Courtyard Hot May 20 July 23 dies Courtyard Warm May 20 July ? Courtyard Cool May 20. July 5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 lIES TRIG TED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 calculated for these values from data given in Lysenko's work Influence f Thermal Factors on the Length of the Phases of Plant Development proves to be equal to 0.92. Analysis of the data by planting date given for Various points of the Ukraine and Variety Number 1306 (see table on page 38) shows that under natural conditions the stage of vernalization of the cotton plant - based on temperatures shown by booth readings - may already proceed with mean atmospheric temperatures of the order of 18 - 36 degrees Centigrade. Normal atmospheric temperatures at Kherson during May are 11.9 degrees during the first ten days, 16.8 degrees during the middle ten days, and 18.0 during the last ten days. Therefore the processes connected. with fruiting of the cotton plant can already proceed from the middle ten days of May, and even.on some of the first ten days. The relatively intensive stage of these processes can apparently be reached by May 21. And the actual retardation shown by sowings after May 20 is attributable as a rule to the sharp retardation of the budding phase as well, inasmuch as this can then not take advantage of useful temperatures. When sowings are made at the normal times, budding occurs toward the end of June, blooming commences tawrds the end of July or at the beginning of August, after which the cotton plant still develops for another month at temperature over 20 degrees and begins to open its boils in September, mostly during the second half of that month, with the temperature of the air still holding above 15 degrees. The normal onset of frosts in the Ukraine and in all the new cotton regions is in the middle or the second half of October. Tt should be pointed out?that these frosts, at least in the Ukraine ,Y are Brilevka, 1930 N Brilevka, I930 I Brilevka, 1931 Skadovsky;, 1932 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ATMOSPHERIC TEMPERATURES AMID STAGES OF VERNALIZATION OF THE COTTON PLANT Planting Dates Hig hest Mean Tenperture of Atmosphere (in s~ieteorolo i a1 Booth) g c between these date? in degrees Centigrade. May 5 and 20 17 17.2 _.17.0 16.5 16. June 27 and July b April 30 and. 161 ~ 16.0 15.5 II.E.8 May 10 May 5 and 21 18.2 15.9 16.5 15.9 -- July 1 and June 2I and 26 June 30 and July 5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 usually accompanied by a general fall in the march of temperature, so that as a`rule they apparently do not in themselves result in any large crop losses. Let us now go further into the observed relations between the temperature conditions for the development o I the cotton plant and its productivity, for which purpose the following table m ay be examined, together with the chart in Figure 5 (on page L2) ATOSPHEEIC TEMPERATURE, LENGTH OF THE GROWING SEASON, AND LINT YIELD 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932. . ripening 18.1 19.7 21.3 20.3 22.L 19.0 21.5 Years Mean temperature ng to from somd Number of days from sowing to ripening 172 11.3 127 133 120 16L. 130 133 Harvest before the frosts, in tsentner per hectare 0 0 5.1 O d 11.3 0.5 6.1 10.7 There is an intimate relation between the productivity of cotton and the temperature conditions of.. the year,; the warmer the year,,. the shorter the period between sowing and ripening,and harvest, both before the frost and, the total yield of raw' cotton. correlation between the mean :atmospheric temperature from sowing; ripening is expressed, for instance at Khersnn, by the coefficient of correlation 0.87,, while the correlation between the interval? in days, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 between sowing and ripening, and the size of harvest is expressed by the coefficient of correlation O7) Analysis of the data of past years, obtained under the con- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ditions of the Ukrainian Zonal Station, indicates that total ~.int yields exceeding S tsentner per hectare, with about o.~ tsentner per hectare, with about 0.! tsentner per hectare harvested. before the frosts, may be readily obtained under conditions analogous to 1928, which was characterized by the following ind.icia: mean atmospheric temperature. from 1"Iay to October was 17.6 degrees, from August to October 1S.5 degrees, number of days with atmospheric temperature not lower than 13 degrees was 1L8, not lower than degrees was 128, and not lower that 20 degrees was If we start from these figures, then of the total of 26 years with temperature data, for hherson studied by us, the following percentage of this number of years according to the various indicia must be assigned to the category of years with less than mean productivity: ording to mean temperature from May to October, inclusive...27.percent Acc of these years,. According to mean temperature from August to October, Inclusive...19 percent. According to number of days with temperature no lower than 13 dgrees-------1~ percent cording to number of days with temperature no lower than 15 degrees------------------11 percent According to number of days with temperature no lower than egrees---- --11 percent.; 20 degrees--------------11' AVERAGE.. , ...16.6 ~ perce`n it is clear from this that the indicia pointing to the probability of unfavorable temperature conditions, even in the most northerly ill! y II. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 zones of the new regions, are not great and even these relate to sowings of Variety No 169, with still far from complete application of the most recent achievements of agricultural technology. In the meal time we already have varieties of cotton that are much earlier and more productive than Number 169, while agronomic pra Lice has also made great strides forward during the past two or three years. At this point it w11 be appropriate to give an evaluation of the temperature conditions for cotton in 1933? Weather conditions for cotton in the Ukraine add up to an exceedingly unfavorable situation for 1931. Figure !? Total Harvest of Lint, number of days from Planting to Maturation, and mean atmospheric temperature during the growing season, shown in relation to each other (Data for Kherson). All months without exception have been cooler than normal in the Ukraine, with average departures ranging from 1 to 2.9 degrees. If we compare 1933 with 1930, when weather conditions were the most un-. favorable of all the ears in which we have been growing cotton on a TRIO TED 15.. d\ t / oq j Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 practical scale and the temperature indica sharply deviated from normal on the bad side, then 1933 appears to be even more unfavorable, for all of its growing months were considerably colder than 1930, and in addition the first killing frost of autumn occurred almost half a month earlier than usual in 1933? Sharp retardation was noted in allphases of cotton development in 1933, and the cotton plants were killed by frosts before they commen- ced to mature and open their bolls. This forced us to determine the frequency of seasons like that of 1933 by calculating the aggregate effective temperatures during the growing season for each such ten-day period from 1882 to 1933 inclusive. The temperatures included in the calculatio were those known to be physiologocally effective both for the initial and final stages of cotton development,and thus omitted all temperatures below l5 degrees. The data were taken for Khersony which is situated at the center of the Ukrainian cotton zone, and the following results were obtained: Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The rre an longterm normal of this aggregate, for the growing season, is 286.LL.. degrees. The highest such aggregate was 352,3 degrees in 192. The lowest was 197.3 degrees in 1933. Before that this value had never dropped below the 222,8 degree lead reached in 1916. Similar results obtained by the calculation of other. temperature indicia also point to the exceptional position occupied by the year 1933? The percentage of summers with sharply depressed temperatures, that is with such aggregates not over 250 degrees, calculated on the basis of 52 years of observations, is 13 percent in all, including 1930 and 1933. The year 1933 in its relation to cotton is unusual, and it is for this reason that the results of our agricultural technology deserve attention and are interesting indications of the accomplishments of our work; for, applying all th st important achievements of that technology, it was possible, even under these "imposdble" weather conditions of 1933 for the Skadovsk base to obtain a yield of 5.8 tsentner per hectare of raw cotton from a field of L.9 hectares. Moisture We turn now to the conditions of natural watering of the areas of cotton planting, and shall attempt to evaluate them, starting with these needs of the cotton plant for water, by the satisfaction; of which an economically useful effect can be obtained. We shall therefore ~i first of a,11 explain, as far as the available data permits;, ?the` role of precipitation and soil moisture in the creation of the 'lint yi;eld., , cipitation during the growing season, from Ukraine data;,? g;ive$. i ri .`genera Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 EZTRICTEO The mp an longterm normal of this aggregate, for the growing season, is 288dG degrees. The highest such aggregate was 352.3 degrees j..n i921. The lowest wss 197.3 degrees in 1933? Before that this value had never dropped below the 222.8 degree lead reached in 1916. Similar results obtained by the calculation of other temperature indicia also point to the exceptional position occupied by the year 1933. The percentage of summers with sharply depressed temperatures, that is with such aggregates not over 250 degrees, calculated on the basis of 52 years of observations, is 13 percent in all, including 1930 and 1933. . The year 1933 in its relation to cotton is unusual., and it is for this re ison that the results of our ap,ricultural technology deserve attention and are interesting indications of the accomplishments of our work; for, applying all th st important achievements of that. technology, it was possible, even under these "impose ible" weather .~ I conditions of 1933 for the Skadovsk base to obtain a yield. of 5.8 tsentner per hectare of raw cotton from a field of L.9 hectares, .Moisture We turn now to the conditions of natural watering of the areas of cotton planting, and shall attempt to evaluate there, starting with these needs of the cotton plant for water, by the satisfaction of which an economically useful effect can be obtained.. We shall therefore first of all explain, as far as the available data permits, the role of precipitation and soil moisture in the creation of the lint yield. The direct juxtaposition of cotton productivity with the pre- cipitation during the growing season, from Ukraine data, gives in general NESTRICTEA - 79 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ?l- t44 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R00010021 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 This phenomenon can be explained by the fact that wetyears are as a rule cooler than dry years, while heat is one of the decisive factors for the outcome of the cotton season, so that::.its influence is more strongly reflected in the productivity of cotton than the direct effect of precipitation. Observations made over a period of two years on the, territory of the Ukrainian Zonal Stafi~ion and of its bases on. the withdrawal of moisture from soil under cotton as compared with that in fallow, and also experiments on the immediate estimation of trans iration of cotton plants by the pot method, have shown that these plants p use very little water during the initial phases of development, or roughly up to the budding stage. Nearer to the blooming period, the consumption of water increases, and sharply increases just before that period is reached, attaining a maximum with the flush of anthesis and boll formation. It subsides again as maturation approaches. If we assume that the critical period, with respect to soil moisture, in the development of the cotton plant, coincides with the period of most in- tense consumption of water by it, then we should expect to find that soil moisture conditions during this period had a powerful effect on the productivity of cottons With rare exceptions (as in 1931) this period comes in August, under Ukrainian conditions. It would therefore be necessary to seek a positive relationship between August precipitation and the size of the harvest. However, Chart 3 (Figure 6) shows plainly that even in this case heat is more important for the cotton plant than , moisture since even here the precipitation still maintains its inverse variations with respect to the size of the harvest, whil`e' the distinct- ness of the positive correlation between mean temperature and harvest is still unimpaired. I1is, therefore,. entirely `natural that inyears with ample heat watering of the,. cotton plant at blooming time sharply; Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 In such eases , as is generally known from the work of.the Ukrainian Zonal Station, the Brilevsk Irrigation Station and the Dagestan Zonal' Station, irrigation can more than double the yield of the cotton plant, . CL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 since in warm years, greatly resembling each other in therma onditions, .large cotton crops are obtained when rainfall is heavy during the growing season. The data on temperature, rainfall and cotton yield in the following table graphically illustrate and confirm this point. 1927 1931 Rainfall from May to October, inclusive, in millimeters 128.5 205.6 Lint Yield in Tsentner per Hectare 8.814.5 This yield, which is with irrigation, is less than normal. Without irrigation it was even less - about L. tsentner per hectare. Direct juxtaposition of the lint yield and that of precipitation in those separate zones and subones of the new regions which have most heat and least rain may be expected to reveal a positive corre- lation between them, and this work will be done o n the basis of the data available when the appropriate stage of the study is reached. The data for 1929 throw a eertain amount of light on the question of theinfluence on cotton yields of considerable deviation of precipi_ ta.tion from the norm in single years. In that year 1UL. millimeters of rain fell from May to October, dur::Lng the growing months of cotton. Based on many years' data, the norm in Kherson for this period is 21( millimeters. Thus in 1929 precipitation was 66 millimeters short of the normal for this period, which amounts to a deficiency of 31.E 'per-' cent, and ;yet the yield of cotton in that year amounted to 12`.2 tsen tnex'` PRECIPITATION DURING THE GRCMING MONTHS AND YIELDS Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ESTfiICTEO per hectare without the use of irrigation. Among the factors participating in the growing of the cotton crop are not only the precipitation during the..growirig period but also the presence of soil moisture stocks from the very moment of .. planting, and consequently also the precipitation that originates these stacks of soil moisture. In fact, if two years ar.e selected both with ample. warmth, both with sirmilar precipitation during the growing seasons. but different preciptation during the prece din autumn-wi g titer period, before the `planting, it will be found that the larger harvest is ob- tained with more abundant pre-sowing precipitation. THE CONTRIBUTICI OF PRE-COTTON-PLANTING PRECIPITATION TO THE SIZE OF THE RESULTANT HARVEST Precipitation durin. the 1927 1. .. ~' pre-planting months of October to April, in millimeters 116.0 0 Spring soil moisture,in millimeters, in the top 1-meter layer of soil.....,. 162.8 220.8 Precipitation during the growing months of cotton in millimeters...,,.'.. 138,5 iL 0 Yield in tsentner per hectare.... , .... , 8.812 .2 Note: The partial increase of yield in 1929 as compared with 1927 must be attributed to better thermal conditions. *See the footnote to the preceding table. It is entirely natural that the role of the spring soil moisture stocks should vary with the quantity and character of recipi? p tataon during the growing season. In years when the cotton growing season is arid, the role of these stocks will increase, while on the . contrary, in wet?years, when rainfall is abundant during the period while the cotton plant remains in the ground, its role will diminish. liEs TR;C TED " 83 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ;iEST81CTED yield by 2602 percent as compared with the control . this under the arid conditions of the second half of the 19;32 growing; season - so that, calculated on the. hectare basis, they yielded, about 5 tsentner per hectare. Thus, provided spring moisture stocks are sufficient, it is apparently possible, even if the precipitation during the growing period is considerably reduced, to obtain cotton harvests fulfilling the quotas set by the planned national economy. Under. drought conditions, moreover, which are especially c1e7r1y expressed towards the end of the grcwing season, the bolls open earlier, but a certain deterioration of fiber quality must be noted when there has been no rain. Thus the fiber length was shorter than that of the control by l.5 millimeters in the cotton grown on the plots protected from the rain since germination, while on the plots sheltered since budding it was 0.6 millimeters shorter. At the present time profounder investigations are being made into the significance of precipitation and. the surface stocks of soil moisture, using the same method of protection froir ain by rre ans of movable roofs (Kherson, Prikumsk, Tarran' ), and also the method of enclosing soil columns (monoliths) in isolation cells, assuring normal area of supply and approximately normal depth for root propagation; with the depth of some of these columns reaching i5p centimeters. We dwell finally on the critical value of soil 'mois'ture,' at ..which the normal nutrition of the plant is disturbed. Repeated observations Ira de by us in 1932 on the territory of the Ukrainian Zonal. `Station the soil moisture at times of acute water withdrawa1 sympto, s ,of the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 L14y Lt LL ujlt moisture in the deep layers below 80 ?- 90 centimeters For this reason it is passible that water starvation m n ay of occur when ordinary maximum hygroscopicity of the cotton plant, provided there are still moisture stocks in deeper sail layers available for consumption, field in full bloom, columns of soil, including the roots of a few growing cotton plants, were dug up. Each column had a cross section Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 iESTR1CTED to be made more precise, us on agricultural meteorology. The new regions enjoy a sufficiently favorable normal distribution of precipitation throughout the year, falling principally or in sufficient norm~la.mounts in June, July and August, when it is most needed. Thus at Kherson, Kho Sennoy, prikumsk and.Khasav-Yuri, the precipitation by MONTHS PLACE.- ~__ uary February March April Mra, June July Kherson 20 15 18 2I~ ~0 ~2 L1.0.. Khutor-Sennoy Li 27 33 28 26 Lj 3L. prikumsk 13 7 15 31 ) 67 81 Khasa.vMYurt 20 29 23 33 53 67 53 August September October November Dec December Year -----~- -- herson K . 3L 2~ 30 27 2 7 3 ] Khu tor-Sennoy prikumsk 39 37 ) 2 111 La 23 L3 19 )4 15 4L2 r,5 f 393 Khasav-Yuri Li.8 51 L6 36 6 3 498 It must be said of the May precipitation that it has a dual character. On the one hand, moderate moistening of the sown layer in May, during the period of the sowing and gennination of the seed is useful; on the other hand, rainy weather in May reduces the number of working days during the strenuous planting period and delays its come. pletion, while excess rain leads to the formation of incrustations and Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED frequently also to subsurface packing. With the increasing disorders under these conditions, such as root rot etc., it leads to considerable' mortality among the seedlings, unless` corresponding agrotechnical measures are taken. Excessive precipitation is particularly harmful when it precedes the general emergence of the seedlings.. The rains during the second ten days of May are an example of this in the Ukraine.The experience of 1930 and 1932 there showed that when rainfall increased to around )4.O - 60 millimeters, it already became necessary to take . energetic steps to control incrustation. To jude by the data of man r~ years, however, all these har~lful results of excessive May rainfall are relatively infrequent in the new regions. We note that. September droughts are especially characteristic of the Ukraine, before ripening and opening of the bolls. This tends to be on the whole advantageous rather than the contrary, since, asp we have already noted, if soil moisture is insufficient just before ripening, the cotton plant begins to shed its leaves and accelerate the opening of the ripening bolls. Finally, rain is harmful during the harvesting period, at the end of September and October, since it reduces the number of working days and also to some extent shortens the working day by causing mists and dews, increases the dampness of the lint and the probability of fungus infection and adversely affects its quality. To sum up all the material on the relation between cotton and precipitation and soil moisture, the high degree of adaptability of this plant should be noted. It can react favorably to improvement in water conditions, but at the same time it is also able to reconcile itself to very severe deprivations of soil moisture and still give economically useful results. RESTRICTED g8 . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Taking all this into account, we reach the conclusion that all conditions in the new regions meet all the theoreti w---.- - cal prerequisites for the development of unirrigated cotton growing as the fundamental background of their agriculture. Sunlight is a very important factor in the development of plants in general, with not only the duration of insolation but its intensity and character (whether direct or diffused lig'ht) imraor?tant elements for developrnent and. growthb It is well known that a considerable section of the plant warld is divided into two groups: the sowca lied "long-day plants" and t'sho rt~day+- plants. The former. category, s has been shown by T. E. Lysenko in his work Have Agricultural Plants an ,--. Intrinsic. Photo-period Requirement? , require uninterrupted illumination for passage through One of their stages and can only adapt themselves . to s ome~..degree of alternation of dark periods, while the latter category requires uninterrupted darkness for passage through one of their s t,ages and similarly can only adapt themselves to a certain degree of alternation of light periods. Besides these two categories there is also an inter mediate category that behaves indifferently to the alternation of light and darkness. Cotton is a short-day plant. For this reason its northw~3,rd displacement towards latitudes with longer days, into the new regions, should Obviously of itself operate to delay boll formation if all other conditions remained unchanged. However the early varieties grown in the new regions are either completely indifferent to the greater length of the day or almost so. (H, Konstantinov The --Influence of the Length of RES TRIC TED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 the Period of Illumination on the Developmentof the Cotton Plant, 1930) It is also pointed out in the agricultural literature that the 'mdative processes of the cotton plant reach their m aximum during ass~. most intense ins oiation and that cotton thus appears to be the hours of 'cd i sll~'1W loving ovin_. ~.plant. (V? A. Novikov, A Conte ution to Physiology - ~, typl. of the Cotton Plant. :Invest ns ice- ceeses of Assimilation, the Dynmics of the StomaApparatus and the Transpiration of the Cotton Plant. Parallel to the increased duration of ins olation there is an improvement in the temperature, regif1en of air and 'soil, and the atmos 'c humidity diminished with the increasing intensity of insolation pheric - and the rise in temperature levels. These factors act to accelerate {.. ~1 I A W6~h~.},} ,I ~Pa m7va hlrf,~,l +a?~ dl Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 through the stages approaching maturation (heat) and ais passage mechanically accelerate the process of opening of the ripe boils ~. atmospheric humidity and heat). 'It is of course obvious that clear ( sunlit days sLmplift' cotton picking and keep lint quality at the proper level (drY,white, undamaged by fungus, etc.). , An experiment was carried out in 1932 on the territory of the Ukrainian Zonal Station to clarify the role of direct and diffused light in the development of the cotton plant and the harvest, even though only in the sense of furnishing rnishin.. very general orientation. The experiment consisted in growing cotton without direct sunlight, o r with 'oniy restricted amounts of it (suchs allowing morning hours or only in the evening hours) The plarits were shielded .. .. " f romdirect sunlight' by portable plywood rao set up pit the height of l y ~.n~ f~~hese ;plots fore,;the'~ other e~,perimeia~ on ' n . ~.ants the ; .~ va ad AS ;a result the Co ~wv~a inly w~eather~ ~hii ~ ~a~he sky , W ~, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA RDP82-00039R000100210002 6 if EST RIOTED Illumination on the Development of the Cotton Plant, 1930) the Period of - -------- - -- It is also pointed out in the agricultural literature that the ass e processes of the cotton plant reach their m aximum 'during ~.ma.lata.v intense insolation and that cotton thus appears to be the hours of most a typical sun-loving plant. Ur A. Novkov, A Contribution to Physiology atian,. Plant. Investigations the 'rocesses of Asp of the Cotton P1 - th e Dynamics of the 5tomatal Apparatus and the Transpiration of the 0otton P'1a,nt. ) Parallel to the increased duration of insolation there is an he temperature regimen of air and soil, and the atmos- ~.mprovement 1 n t pheric humidity diminished nished with the increasing intensity of insolation and the rise s e in temperature levels. These factors act to accelerate passage through the stages approaching maturation (heat) and also accelerate the process of opening of the ripe bolls mechai~cally (atmospheric humidity and. heat). It is of course obvious that clear sunlit days sa. 'mplify cotton picking and keep lint quality at the proper level (dry, white, undamaged by fungus, etc.). An experiment was carried out in 932 on the territory of the ~. Ukrainian Zonal Station to clarify the role of direct and diffused light in the development of the cotton plant and the harvest, even though only of furnishing very general orientation. The experiment in the sense rowing cotton without direct sunlight, o r with .'only consisted in g as. a.1lc~ri.ng direct sunlight only in the restricted amounts of it such , enin hours). The plants were shielded morning hours or only in the ev g fromdirect sunlight by portable plywood roofs, set up at the height of the plants and taken f romyhese plots for the other. experiment only in rai.nly weather when al he sky was overcast. As a result the cotton lIES TAlC TEQ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 evenirr liuur, , gave only o1iL~+ry 1:~iooni? anti e c ei:~t~ car a:l.i r :a e a t, that: IRICTER plantB depri.`re tD t` aucii.re.ott sunlight e1noe Lncef;~t on of buctcl.l r and limited exriuaive1r.to ;inci:i.rect light end, out fruiting branelree but cl.i:1 r}til !`7er arid yie1dct1 iro cops (Figure 7) P'lantte dcpr"tved of cti rec k: Ft uu:l.i ht dur:i.rig morArrIn nc1 nri.clcl;ry hours, or duririg mi( ctay Mn+ t1're ii:1eip:1.entt be1?1 d::i.d nc~t f'iri1r h tare:i r cl .Vf3 :iO1)rtre.t1t 3i')c1 d:1.d no i rir tur before the forsits , w1ti.i.e 11. 1:~o17.s iii the conttioi J::l.ot~ tUI(d arid olJett et:l be t L) t,h tt 't.iiire , t':i.n,a1'tr, :1.rr ttlto~ e 111 tirtt a icelv~tt frotrr ii 11 ugh :.1iice i`Low-e.t,u by iirg l.e axid double l tyre11$ of tin l'au e oS:en Lrrg of tie tai,>11a w u r?ett ..rdecl acid yield roniet~rhrl1. rerf.lceclF Figui1e i a i ~t;w oil i~h.i.elr Cotton P1aritte Developed Fx~a.itr udd:t.n Time Wi.Uroutt Direct Surr1.ight~ Thee Plarrt leave ]eaves but no Open Fou1.s.y while Po111 leave Ai:redy Opened core the Conttrois s lu aeccsrdarrese t .itch tttki , c i.r' ct Corre1anon way established try r~rat;hemat.ical a.rr 1.y i , betwc err the tot, .1 du.rratiorr 0f iri oL tic)n i.rr iiour s trxng the growing period +nra the yield of eottto,rrm 'phe coef.f':1. c,:Lentt of co rre1at_ic n between tIre total. yi.el.cI of rate cotton and the number of houre of irr5oiatt1on between Augu t air~:t October, incIu ive, at Icchereon (i9 - 1930) wa 0.60; tl~at between the :}x ~:f'ro t lint yield and *the nrxirii:ier of loin of . n, olation 1.etween May and octobexy, 1ncluaive~ was oA lrex"Y eio8e direct carrel tiort is a o observed between the ~. 9l Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED number of hours of insulation and the speed with which the various stages of development were traversed by the cotton plant. Among the reasons for the positive influence of sunlight on the yield acid on the speed of passage through the phases of development are the improvement in the temperature regimen in the plant itself, besides the well Imown reasons (the need of l ight for normal assimilation, etc.). Measurements of leaf temperatures in 1932 showed them to be much higher in plants receiving direct sunlight than in those hot receiving it, while the difference between the temperatures of insolated and un- insolated plants showed a regular daily march, rising towards midday and falling towards evening, like the amount of s olar radiation itself, (Leaf temperatures were measured by thermometers with small mercury bulbs. The bulbs were placed flat 'against the leaves, which remained on the plants. See Geiger The Climate of the Surface.Stratum of the Atmosphere on this method.) which difference was of the order of - 6 degrees Centigrade for the midday hours The data in the table show that the temperature of cotton leaves is much higher during the midday hours than that of the surrounding air, and that this temperature is already higher during the morning hours, while on the contrary, the temperature of leaves on uninsolated plants is lower throughout the whole day than that of the surrounding air. .. 92 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 number of hours of insolation and the speed with Mich the various stages .of development were traversed by the cotton plant. Among the reasons for the positive influence of sunlight on the yield and on the speed of passage through the phases of ? development are the improvement in the temper2ture regimen in the plant itself, besides the well 1~nown reasons (the need of light for normal assimilation, etc.,). Measurements of leaf temperatures in 1932 showed them to be much higher in plants receiving direct sunlight than in those hot receiving it, while the difference between the temperatures of insolated and un- insola..ted plants showed a regular daily march, rising towards midday and falling towards evening, like the amount of solar radiation itself; (Leaf temperatures. were measured by thermometers with small mercury bulbs. The bulbs were placed flat against the leaves, which remained on the plants. See Geiger The Climate of the Surface Stratum of the Atmosphere on this method.) which difference was of the Order of - 6 degrees Centigrade for the midday hours The data in the table show that the temperature of cotton leaves is much higher during the midday hours than that of the surrounding air, and that this temperature is already higher during the morning hours, while on the contrary, the temperature of leaves on uninsolated plants is lower throughout the whole day than that of the surrounding air. RESTB1CiED 92 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The data in the tables show that the tempex ture of cotton leaves is much higher during the midday hours than that of the surrounding hours while, on the contrary, the temperature of leaves on uninsolated plants lower throughout the whole day than that of the surrounding . is that this temperature is already higher during the morning air, and the thermal energy of sunlight. This idea has been noted in connection with a. number of other plants in the general literature . Plant Life . of Professor A. Kerner von Mariulane If this is really the case, then it is incorrect to calculate conditions of plant development only from the temperature the thermal of the a.tmospheres without taking into account the conditions of In this case the actual amount of heat received i11uminationas well daylight, even where atmospheric temperatures were identical. Thus , ,,. a. temperature we might expect a reduction inthe aggregate tmoshperic as :cotton rowin season to maturity, required for completion of the g g growing moved northward from latitudes with short days into latitudes ti r . with longer days. by the plant organism under identical temperatures would be higher with /anger exposure to sunlight. The actual. amount of heat so received in a. day might well prove to be higher in latitudes with longer Future investigations into this subject will bring firm con- more definite status. It is even today necessary clusaans and gave it a to note., as a highly desirable method a.nd calculation of thermal eon- topment of the cotton plant by immediate measure d~.tions o f the deve ment of plant temperatures:. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 A large number of physiological processes_ in the plant organism are unquestionably influenced by atmospheric humidity, such as trans- piration, heating and cooling of the plant tissues, etc., and therefore his factor, during the period of the development of the p la.nt in the field, may be expressed both in its behavior and its productivity. For instance, the excessively dry air of the so-called arid regions, where` a number of crops. Suffer from insufficiency of soil moisture, dry winds, etc., is obviously an unfavorable factor for such regions. the Ukraine nevertheless gives an inverse variation as the rule: drier air; more rapid development and higher yields. However, we have no reason to treat this variation as causal in nature, for atmospheric humidity depends most closely on temperature. As a rule the march of atmospheric humidity repeats the general pattern of the march. of temperature, but inversely; the warmer the air, the drier it is. For this reason the above indicated connection with atmospheric hu- midity may be shown to be in reality merely the result of a causal con- Our comparison of the atmospheric humidity with the rapidity of development and the productivity of cotton under the : conditions of . nection between the rate of development and. productivity of 'cotton on the one hand and the thermal levels. on the other. Experimental veri- fication of this is expected from research in the near future. The inverse connection with humidity shows that its reduction in general does, not result in extremely sharp reduction of cotton crops, which in turn indicates:the relative stability of cotton yield under Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Phases of Development of the Cotton Plant under Various , es of The literature on cotton growing refers to the retarding effect of extremely low atmospheric humidity on the. development. of cotton. Thus E. E. Fedorov and A. V. Gedeonov remark, in their ''Duration of the Weather, ;that 'mean humidities under LO percent "clearly have a tendency to prolong the phases, with the possible exception of the final phase; be;:I formation and maturation". However there is also some indication in. the literature (Moiseyenko, The Quality of Cotton Picked a c`?Various. Dates-) that the littoral districts of the new regions (with their higher atmospheric humidity) yield lint of higher grades than these remote from the sea. It is natural that questions involving more detailed study of the part played by atmospheric humidity in the development and crop formation of cotton as well as other meteorological factors, on lint quality, should attract the attention of research workers. They accordingly have a definite place in the current program of`NOVNIKhI. To recapitulate, there is still no solid reason to consider increased atmospheric huiiiidity harmful for the cotton plant, and in- creased dryness beneficial. Further than that, extreme dryness of the air can apparently reduce both quality and quantity of the crop.. Dryness of the atmosphere is perhaps clearly beneficial only during the period of approaching maturation and that of the opening of the bolls, since it accelerates. the mechanical processe's of dryin and g opening g of the bolls, reduces the probabiLty of fungus infection of the lint, reduces the moisture content of the lint, etc. This leads to im- provement of the quality of the raw cotton "and simplifies its storage and utilization. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 It, The new and. old cotton regions may be compared as to atmospheric ,., : humidity by taking the available data for mean humidity from April to . in Kherson and Tashkent In Kherson is is 6.9 percent; October with ~3 percent for Tashkent (L A. Molchanov, A'Contributon compared w~a to the Question of the division of the Area into Climatic Re ions.). Comparison between other points of the new and old regions gave. results substantially the same if not more striking.. It is evident from this that cotton growing in the old regions is charac l ~ increased dryness of the air as compared with the terized bysparp~ new regions, and that, if extreme dryness of the air really has an effect on quantity and quality of the cotton crop and unfavorable hampers to development of the cotton plant, etc., then the new regions will be found to be considerably more free of these unfavorable phenomena. finds Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 II ESIRICTED Winds play an immense part in agriculture in general, and in cotton growi.ng in particular. Strong winds immediately before or immediately after the planting ... season are unquestionably harmful, since they dry out the topsoil and the cotton seed then lies in an insufficiently moist soil layer. Dry winds in the period of fruit, formation are also harnfLul, especially during the period of the inception of the bolls, as they result in excessive transpiration and insufficient water supply to the above ground parts of the plant. Boll opening is accelerated, however, where insufficiency of moisture develops only shortly before their normal opening, and in most cases this should be considered a favorable event. RESTRIcYp 8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 In the ?erature C. D. Novikov, Research into the Assa..mz.lative ,h.i~ Procewes D arrlics of the Stomatal Apparatus and Trans The establishment of connections between the development of the cotton plant and single meteorological elements has still given us no tz answer to the problem of their Influence and joint action an the yield, which is the most important practical question. Its solution 4 F~ in a given set of natural should show us what yields may be counted on ; (climatic) conch-tions in a given locality, which information is essential for purposes of planning, etc.. sk, iration of the 0!I there is also a reference to the closure of the Cotton Plant, (193 stomata/ fissures provoked by strong winds thereby reducing the level .. which assimilative processes function. at have an unfavorably effect on the duality of winds may also ha out of he bolls, soiling it with dust, . of the lint by tearing it interfering with p1cking, etc. Work has .:just. been completed` on a classification of the winds according to their degree of harmfulness, . as well as a study of their role as it affects the cotton crops in other ways end therefore we shaJ4 not linger here on a further desucssion of their characteristics and significance. There are still no completely reliable and verified practical methods of calculating the ensemble of climatic influences as a single factor exerting a unified effect, and we must still use indirect methods for evaluating that ensemble. We start with the conditions that the maximum harvest obtained in a given year on the territory of the area to be appraised shall be an index number expressing to totality or t resultant of climatic influences for the year, assuming further the . highest attained level of agricultural technique. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED The data on the recorded harvests in Kherson, where agricultural methods also include irrigation, sketch the, following ;picture: Mean, YEARS 1925 1926 ` 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 Excluding 1932 Yield in Tsentner Per Hectare 2.0 6.5 16.7 6.2 30.0 10.3 26.1 11.6 13.7 We see from this that modern agricultural techniques, including irrigation, are capable of obtaining annual cotton crops in the K nerson area not lower, as a rule, than 6 tsentner per hectare, based on the total harvest, that is, even under unfavorable meteorological conditions as a whole (as in 1926) a yield of 6 tsentner per hectare is entirely attainable. This is apparently contradicted only bar the figures for 1925. But in that year the yield from bolls that did not open of themselves was excluded from the total; moreover, the specific agricultural techniques for cotton growing in the new regions, including the Ukra ne, had not yet been worked out, and finally the figures for that year relate to a less early variety (169) than those at present in practical use. The results from the practice of ui4rrigate4 otton growing are even more convincing. Although these production figures include such times and such years of unfavorable weather as 1930, when there were damaging heavy rains in spring and exceptionally low temperatures in spring, the beginning of summer and in the fall, the better kolkhozes a complying with the rules of cotton agronomy, did not fail even in such a year to obtain a yield of lint higher than 6 tsentner per `hectare. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 100 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Thus in? 1930 the Perebudova Artel in Golopristanskiy Rayon obtained an average yield of 6.4 tsentner of lint per hectare and the Chervoniy Prapor also obtainedthe same yield, while. similarly' situated Kolkhozes that knew nothing of the methods of handling cotton obtained only insig- nificant yields. In 1931 yields of 10 12 tsentner per hectare were obtained by a"number of kolkhozes, and on single farms as much as 16 - 18 tsentner. In 1932 the highest yields on the best farms reached 8 tsentner per hectare (Obshchiy Trad . Khleborob in Genicheskiy Rayon, Kolkhoz imeni X Godovshchiny Oktyabrya in N. Odesskiy Rayon) Thus the decisive Factor here in obtaining cotton yields is not weather conditions but agr:i.cultural technique, the role of which becomes particularly responsible when weather conditions are bad, since with bad management of cotton, crop losses in years with un- favorable combinations of meteorological conditions grow up faster than in favorable years. It is enough to point out that badly organ- ized incrustation control measures in years' of excessive nay rains can result in the elimination of extensive tracts from the category of . plantable acreage. In cool and humid years, little favorable for cotton, the plants are subject to great danger from the rank development of weeds. In such years failure to observe the rules of cotton agronomy on weed contort has a particularly pernicious effect on yield. In cool years, with early onset of frost, all measures of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 agr:; cultural technique directed at accelerating maturation' acquire Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED particular importance;_ area of `supply,' planting date, etc. The 'newer ., methods, such as vernalization, transplantation of seedlings, etc., should also be used, and also the proper varieties. Whiie in years with favorable weather conditions some departure from the rules of agricultural' technique may entail only relatively minor reduction in yield, the same departure in unfavorable years may cause tremendous reductions in yield as well asimpairment of quality, since every day gained plays a great part in the outcome of the cotton season. Poor organization of the measures to controlvarious causes of crop loss will also cause sharper drops in the yield.if the autumn is cool and windy than if it is dry, calm and warm. Finally the responsible part played by cultural practices under unfavorable weather conditions is obvious, as is its exceptionally important role in the efforts to improve quality and assure proper picking, drying and storage at the proper time. CONCLUSIONS Heat is the most important element for cotton in the entire climatic picture, at least. in the northern part of the new regions (Ukraine), and therefore, given the same cultural practices, the yield of cotton depends upon it most of all. The more heat the cotton plants receive in any given year, the shorter the time it takes to mature and the higher the yield per hectare, if the basic rules of cultural prac~ Lice are followed, . The. correlation noted in cotton literature between the time required for the development of the cotton plant and the temperature: levels prove on more detailed analysis to be confiremed only in general. RES TRIC TED -102 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED In a number of cases, one phase or'the other takes longer with a higher. temperature, and this maybe ascribed in some instances to the retarding efects of the ma.:nimum temperatures and the increased dryness of the air, but in other instances it may be due to the retarding effect of high temperatures. To a certain extnet the weather in the new regions does have minimum temperatures low enough to retard the development of cottonp/ants. The weather in the old regions, on the other hand, frequently show the retarding effects of high maximum temperatures. This partly explains the lack of correspondence observed between the behavior of the cotton plant and the thermal resources of the old and new cotton regions, judged by the mean diurnal temperatures alone. The lack of correspondence not infrequently observed between thermal conditions and the rapidity of development of the cotton plant I in its later stages may be explained to a great extent as the result of the temperature after-effect, which appears on analysis of the tempera- ture conditions under which cotton develops in the old and new cotton regions. The phenomenon of the temperature after-effect is apparently of more general.occurrence than vernalization, and consists in the re- duction of the total temperatures required for the completion of the later stages of development where increased total effective temperatures have been accumulated during the earlier phases, and vice versa. The isophase of.the saboteur Zaytsev, applied to any period of development of the cotton plant without being related in any way to the preceding temperature conditions, must be deemed inapplicable if only because it distorts the actual relationship of the cotton plant to the 1 1 thermal conditions. The significance ?.oflY atmospheric' `te'mperature ;conditions for cotton Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 , mareover, modified by its relation to soil' temperature, which Zs., , into account in apprais ng any cotton region. must be taken Judging by the terperature readings in the meteorological booth, the processes of vernalization of cotton under natural conditions can probably proceed with mean diurnal air temperatures of the order of 18 to 16 degrees. These levels are usually attained ... during the middle decade of Ma,yand more definitely so during the. final , decade. If sowi ?ng is done later than May 1~ - 20, therefore, there is : retardation of budding and of the subsequent phases usually a.marked of develo ting in both quantitative and qualitative development, resin inferi' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The normal temperature indices over a number of years for the Ukraine c rrespand town above average productiveness for cotton, a..e, to a total yield of 6 - 8 tsentner per hectare. Tempera ure conditions are unsatisfactory in about 16 percent o f the growing in view of the latest achievements of science, this figure seasons, but may be considered exaggerated. temperature and precipitation, it appears difficult to develop the role of precipitation in the formation of the cotton crop on the basis of general statistical evaluation. Under the same temperature conditions 6. In view of the observed inverse correlation between r higher yields of cotton are obtained in years with higher precipitation during the (growing period. In comparing years with the same precipitation during the growing season, we find, that higher yields are obtained in , xec Oding the sowing period and higher uyears with higher precipitation p , ~stocks This agrees perfectly with the of ,mo~.~ture~sup , td, that ;time . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 result of the experimental irrigation of_ cotton in the new cotton regions, in which irrigation at the flush of anthesi.s, in hot dry years, succeeded in more than doubling the yield. The cotton plant can, however, reconcile itself. to extremely severe soil moisture conditions, and is able to complete its d velopment more or less normally by drawing fully on all available stocks of soil moisture, and even when it receives moisture only in the layers deeper than 80 - 90 centimeters, it still gives an economically useful yield, and meets the requirements of the planned assignments of the national economy in its present stage of development. For the overwhelming ma'orit of the cotton districts in the new. re ions,~unirrigated cotton growing majM therefore be developed as the basic ag otechnical form of its culture. 7. Though cotton belongs to the short-day group of plants, the early varieties cultivated in the. new regions react only slightly to a shortened day, and therefore there is no reason to.expect noticeable retardation of fruiting to result from the shift from the old regions to more northerly areas with a longer day, while in this case the leaves have an additional opportunity to utilize the thermal energy of sun- light. The temperature of leaves of plants exposed to sunlight can be as much as 14 - d degrees higher than that of leaves not so exposed. Insolated leaves may be warmer than the surrounding air by an amount of the order of 2.5 - 3. degrees. Finally, leaves o insolated may be 1.! - 2.0 degrees cooler than the surrounding air during the daytime. This circumstance,:is very important for cotton, as a warmth-loving plant, since with equal atmospheric temperatures it.does in fact receive Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 more heat during a'longer 'period of daylight illumination (a longer day) 8. There would seem to be some confirmation of the phase-retardation . - to which the literature alludes, as a result of exceedingly low atmos- pheric humidity. Low atmospheric humidity has not, however, been definitely shown to be a factor retarding development, perhaps because very low atmospheric humidity is relatively infrequent in the new regions. Further direct experiment will/ be required to verify this, . Exceedingly high temperatures arid'great dryness of the air are characteristic of the old regions to 'a higher degree than of the new regions. r . 9. The climatic conditions in the new regions allow total annual lint yields not lower, as a rule; than'S - 6 tsentner pr e hectare. 10. In the next plan for winning higher productivity it is essential to give priority to the question of eliminating the spread between the actual yield and the yield that would be assured by the natural conditions in the new regions if the presently available The path to this is only through the organizatj.ona1, economic and political strengthening of the cotton sovkhozes and kilkho zes, since only under such conditions will it be possible for them to master perfectly the technique of growing cotton on the northern borders of its cultivation. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 DYNAMICS OF DEVELOPMENT OF THE ROOT SYSTEM OF COTTON The development of the root system of cotton, like that of the plant as a whole depends on the whole complex of the factors that surround the ant, on the nature of the plant itself, on the variety I~- o which it belongs, and, to some extent, in cases where it is, not. t indigenous, on the degree to which it has become accliiT.ted to our cony ditions, i, e.s whether it has been reproduced locally or has been imported from another locality. Plants react differently to cultural methods according to differences in all of these factors, and we must perforce consider the results obtained by the Ukrainian Zonal Station on the development of root systems as having merely a general sig- nificance for orientation only, and assume that deviations in one direction or another are always possible, owing to the above mentioned factors or the meteorological conditions of the particular year in question. At the beginning 0$ vegetation, the aboveground part of the cotton plant develops rather slowly. All the vital energy of the plant is turned towards the development of its root system. I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Before the seed lobe has succeeded in freeing itself from the Y seed cover, the rootlet has already attained a depth of 10 - 12 centi- k 1 meters. By the time the first leaflet appears, the root (in 1923) i ?s four tames as long as the. stalk (height 7.8 centimeters, length of root 30centimeters).~- 'luring ;the budding phase, the roots are five times as long as the above-ground parts of the cotton plant (height lip centimeters, root length 71i. centimeters). ' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Figure 8. Dynamics of development of the root system and the above- ground parts of the cotton plant (variety Shreder 13o6) according to . 1932 data. .?_ff, ^rM?~~r.?.~m'~oHJUMI~'414Nyf.~IK%A%UMD$ W44i +Aq Days 'after Ripening Germination Figure 9.. The root system of the cotton plant in the various stages of develoPment Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 A11 cultural methods in cotton growing should therefore be directed towards giving the plan an opportunity 'to utilize the nutrients from the humus horizon, since the earlier the area of feeding roots is shifted to lower soil horizons, the lower' the yield will be.. During the flowering stage, when transpiration reaches its maximum, the cotton plant once more energetically propagates its roots downward (figure 1 - 2), taking over new soil regions with moisture stocks as yet unconsumed, and expanding its water supply basin all the time. Even during the stage of maturation the growth of the roots does not cease. The difference between the development of the root system of cotton and that of the grains is most striking during the flowering period. In the gramineous plants, the downward growth of the roots usually stops after flowering, while with cotton t still continues quite energetically. This may apparently be explained by the fact that maturation in the cotton plant proceeds gradually and that even when some of the bolls have already matured and opened, there are still flowers and ovaries on theplant that continue to demand moisture and nutrients from the THE MAGNITUDE' OF THE ROOT SYS i'M IN THE COTTON PLANT Contrary to the commonly encountered opinion that the root system. of the cotton plant is weak, sparise and that it ro a a p p g tes itself only wi?hin a one4heter soil horizon; it has been established by the work Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 aESTRICTED THE MAGNITUDE OF THE ROOT SYSTEMIN THE COTTON PLANT Contrary to the commonly held opinion that the root system of the cotton plant. is weak, sparse and that It propagates itself only within the 1 meter soil horizon, it has been established by the work of the Ukrainian Zonal Station that this system reaches 200 to 250 centimeters and more. . The taproot of the cotton plant sends off first-order laterals, which propagate at first almost horizontally. Second-order roots branch off from them, and third and fourth order roots then ramify from these, so fine and delicate as to be almost imperceptible in earth dug up for observation, and only by washing away the soil through a fine sieve can their approximate quantity be determined. The cotton plant can propagate its laterals to very great distances if given ample room at planting. Comparison of the Rotmistrov root coefficients, obtained by multiplying the depth of the vertical roots by the diameter of the area occupied by the laterals, for cotton and other field crops gives the following result: Crops Depth of Roots Diameter of the area of the root s stem Root Coefficient __ 1 3. Winter wheat 116 126 14,616 Winter Rye 130 92 11,960 Barley 110 72 7,920 Spring heat ?' 103 104 10,712 Oats 110 94 10,340 Continued next ~RfS page. 112 ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 i Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 65. 22.1 '~~ ?'~ 9.6 6.? 8O 10.2 1L..1 12.2 3L?7 23?6 10.9 3.8 22. ~ 13.8. 100 100 100 This should be compared with the distribution of the roots of the gramineous plants among the soil horizons, which was as follows: O -2Q ~7 Al 0 r 1~ 60 20 - 140 20 A 2 1S-s 17 0-60 9 B1 -8~ 20 60 80 6 B2 8-l20 120 3 80 - 100 S --ri-r 100 - 120 3 ----- rr 1 According to data of Yu. Sokolovskiy of the Poltava Experiment Station. 2 According to data of N. Pushkareva in 192, at the Rostov-Nakhichevan Experiment Station. It should be noted that cotton makes more uniform use of all soil horizons and that .a considerable part of the roots are propagated at levels below one meter. This makes it very drought resistant. This distribution Is subject to sharp changes, however, depending Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Al 0-20 A2 20-30 B130-fin Cl ,0-100 0 2 100 - 200 0 - 200 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 on other factors, of which moistureand nutrients are the basic ones. THE INFLUENCE OF CULTURAL NETHODS ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE COTTON _ n ROOT SYSTEM The dynamics of development of the root system of cotton also depends, in its various phases, on cultural method ? s, the depth of plowed soil beneath the cotton plant, the depth to which fertiliser is worked in, etc. The opinion has been expressed that the medium in which the roots of a plant grow, whether it be water, sand, light loam or heavy clay, does not exert a decisive influence on the development of the form of the root system (V. I. Rotmistrov. The Root System in Cultivated Plants, 1927, pp, The results of a two year sutdy of the development of the root system of cotton under varied cultural methods indicat es its extraordinary. plasticity and that its form is a meansof ro aga ' p p ta.on through various soil horizons, depending on sharply differei ng conthtions. The form of root system of cotton is very plastic, as may be seen from the photographs in Figures 10, ll and 12. As we see, with a turnover of the fallow soil to a depth of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 J~0 centimeters and introduction of fertilizer to an equal depth, the principal mass of rootlets was distributed atthis :depth. Rootlets were fl% Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16: 0IA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Figure 1U. Propagation of the root system of cotton with . ordinary tillages Figure ll. Propagation of the root system of cotton withters turnover of the soil to a depth of 10 centimeters and. introduction of mineral fertilizers at the same depth. Figure 12. Propagation of the root system of cotton with ordinary tillage, but kith introduction of mineral fertilizer at the depth of 1~O centimeters. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 On introduction of fertilizer to a depth of i0 centimeter's, with- two belts.were formed, the first in the humus out turnover. of the soil, layer and the. second along the.line of the fertilizer. (Figure 12)? ring further investigations an the development of the root Du system, the opinion that the size of the above-ground part is directly proportional to the size of the underground part of the plant in cases where the soil contained sufficient was not confirmed, since moisture and nutrients of system with only a small weight can yield : ~a root a large above-ground mass. It is also inaccurate to deny the influence of plow depth on development of the plant; V. Rotmistrov draws the following conclusions in his pamphlet The Root System deep as l meter, and beyond, then, the pulverization of the soil to 10, r'20 centimeters will help the roots just as little to go deeper into the soa.]. and .1`0 - 20 centimeters is only an insignificant part of . , , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 horizon developed normally, while those sawn in the subsoil were stunted and developed feebly. In October the column was dug out, and the roots washed off rt,appeared that those plants which had been forced to nourish themselves ;exclusively on the lower horizons had been unable to develop normally. Although the root system of cotton descends more or less evenly to a great depth, traversing all the soil, the value of the different soil horizons for plants is not the same. The root system goes deep into the soil in search of moisture, occupying larger.and larger volumes of soil, but soil nutrients are mostly gathered by the roots that have propagated not far from the surface, -j-t is in this location that the biochemical processes of the soil proceed most energetically of all (which can be seen, th"pugh only in the energy of intensification); here too, near the surface, the roots can obtain oxygen and better temperature conditions. The nutrients available at a depth of 1i.0 centimeters were not utilized, and the plants starved and were stunted. The behavior of these plants was the same as'that of cotton grown on subsoil. The results of investigation into the levels from which the cotton plant takes its nutrients give reason to believe that the fu nctaon of roots propagated through the deep horizons of the subsoil is prin. cipally that of obtaining water for the plant, It may be assumed that roots with different functions would also have different chemical compositions, and this is c onf axmed by Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 analysis.' The nitrogen content of cotton rOotS was as follows, in percents Depth Roots taken from deep soil layers are considereably poorer in nitrogen than those from the upper regions. This also gives some assume that with respect to nutrition the principle part is reason to played by the upper soil horizons and. the root system propagated through .... them. To elucidate this question we made the following experiment. soil columns with undamaged structure, 10 x 100 x centi- nuraber of meters in dimension, were taken out in the spring. Some of them were buried in the ground with the normal arrangement of their horizons, while some were inverted co as to place the humus horizon on the bottom and the loess horizon on the top. In November, when the boils had already opened on the c o tton plants in the normal columns, the c otton plants up and washed out. It now appeared that the roots in the column with the humus , horizon on the bottom had reached that horizon; and developed a fairly dense network there, but that they had not utilized the nutrients at that Jeveg.,, so far below the surface, as soil analysis showed. The cotton plants did not develop nprmally under these ;conditions and remained in the budding phase until; almost the end of, the growing season, reaching a height of 1L. centimeters, while inthe normal column the height reached 6 centimeter's and gave the same yield o Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 in the inverted columns were only budding. 'he columns were then dug . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 tamed under field conditions. Thus the depth to which the plant had to go for its nutrients determined the yield in this experiment as well. The humus horizon is very important for the developmentof the plants, and therefore the depth to which that horizon is plowed, which conditions the water, air and nutrient regimen of the soil, is of great significance. This is as also confirmed by the results of another experiment on this question which was carried out in the laboratory section in 1932. plowing and to the varying depth of workingin fertilizer, in other words, at the depth of the fertile horizon, to find the optimum re-. lation of the factors to enable the root systdm to supply the plant with the optimum amount of water and nutrients. There i-s adirect connection between this experiment and the solution of the questions of depth of plowing and methods of intro. ducing fertilizer under the plants, which are important questions in cotton growing. Starting from the consideration that the richest upper soil u ~~ 1 ~'n Vf ~a Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 horizon usually dires out very much during the course of. the growing season and thus is only lightly uti1ized'by the root system, it was attempted by tilling the soil and turning over the sod, to depress the that drying out could . i `. be reduced and it could be better uj ijzed b the .r r ~,,, y~ cotton plant., The object of the experiment was to ascertain; the extent to Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The tillage of the soil to the corresponding depths was per'- formed on April ~, 1932? We shall not now dwell in detail on the results, the obser'- vatlons on the water and nutrient regimes of the soil in their re- lata.on to the depth of plowing, on the time of inception of the phases . of development in their dependence on the depth of tillage and the in fertilizer, and can only remark that the ten- depth of working dency of the cotton plane to delay its phases when its nutrients are , 1ocated at considerable depths below the surface - which tendency we had noted during the experiments on soil columns with undisturbed structure was fully confirmed by these field experiments on laboratory lots. It was most clearly reflected in the case of the plowing to LO p centimeters with sod turnover, with fer,tilazer already introduced at the line of the humus horizon. In this case the budding phase was retarded by 14 days and the flowering phase by 13 days. lNhile only 20 percent of the bolls had opened on these plots by the end o the growing season. With deep plowing and sod turnover, with fertilizer in. the upper horizon, and also on the plots with tillage to )0 centimeters , without, sod turnover, no retardation on the onset of the phases was Even though the root system of cotton plant goes down to 2 1 meters and ~d;eeper, , and the 10 - 20 centimeters of the upper horizon ant part" in relation to that volume of soil is "only an insigna.~~.c, , through which the root sys'em is propagated, this "insignificant part" Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 can nevertheless determine the size of the cotton craps THE INFLUENCE OF DEPTH OF SOIL TILLAGE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ROOT SYSTEM OF THE COON PLANT The computation of the weight. of the roots made during the latter half of August included both small roots :and main roots (the skeleton of the rootsYstem) and revealed a considerable difference r in the scope of development and the method of propagation in the various soil horizons, depending on the depth of tillage and the depth of working in of the fertilizer. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Analysis of the data in the above tables shows that the greatest of roots is found in the upper horizons along the lines of the quantity occurrence of the humus layer or along the lines of introductionof ` with plowing down to 80 centimeters, the small roots pro- fertilizer. teed through the compressed horizon and form, as it were, a second belt,' in which apparently the plant takes water when the plowed horizon dries with plowing to ~0 centimeters, with sod turnover, there is only. a single belt of roots; the active zone of roots is then located at the 140 - 60 centimeter level, and there are considerably fewer small roots in the upper horizon when such .lowing is done. This lack of small roots is due, in this case, to the fact that the upper horizon proves to be less fertile when plowing is too deep. with such plowing the humus layer lies at a depth of 1~0 centimeters, and therefore the greatest distribution of roots is just in that horizon. But the conditions for biochemical processes are less favorable at such a depth. The same must be said of temperature conditions and the air regimen of the soil. Under conditions of (18 - 20 centimeters on chestnut soils) does not cover the top of the subsoil, a dense little network of roots usually develops in the upper Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 horizon when moisture conditions permit. As the moisture supply in the upper horizons decreases, the network of feeding roots spreads out lower, where there is more moisture. The, roots leave the plowed horizon only after conducting a careful search in a horizontal direction for moisture and nutrients. They find more moisture but less nutrient in Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The root system is most developed on the horizon that has. most nu,/s.ents. Though nitrogen as nitrate can readily travel in r he soil when there is rain `, and also have the `ability to follow the action of evaporating water the roots are, nevertheless, mainly distributed in the horizon where the fertilizer was introduced,. i. e,, .. they follow the f ertili..Zer ? the depth of the fertile horizon was re- The. difference in ibution of the thick roots, resulting in the Elected in the d?str most extensive development in the. fertile horizon. All of this agrees with the observations of the same nature at the Rothamstead Experiment Station in England, where the roots were noted in all . cases to be in contact with the fertilized horizon, where they were . not more densely developed and more widely ramified, but also plaa.nly held back by that layer from travelling on to lower horizons. ~' THk DISTRIBUTION OF R00TS IN THE SOIL PROFILE WITH DIFFERIT ~ PLOWING DEPTHS. Observation on the distribution of root systems in the soil by the method of cubid.s The method of cubits was developed by Comrade Taranovskayaa makes it possible to learn not only the total quantity of root material in each horizon but also the den- sity of the root system at different distances from the plant. This has shown that when the rows are spaced as closely as - 10 centimeters the root system of the cotton plant develops in most cases on both sides, and that almost all the laterals spread into the spaces between the rows, running almost horizontally to the middle of these spaces and then turning 'sharply downward. A AICTED srRicrEo 12gr' Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Depth of Working in Fertilizer rking WEIGHT OF ROOTS IN SOIL LAYER 0 - 200 CETVTINETERS, WITH FERTILIZER INTRODUCED AT DIFFERENT DEPTHS mss: H w Fertilizer applied to depth of centimeters . Fertilizer applied to depth of 10 centimeters Fertilizer apl plied to depth of 20 centimeters Fertilizer applied to depth ~ of 0 centimeters Fertilizer applied to depth of 2. centimeters weight of Roots in Kilorams er hectare Large Small Roots Roots Total Yield of Lint eight ?ht of Above-ground 't ~ ue~. mans in tsentner per in Tsentner hectare r Hectare 7,29 3.72 11,01 13.57 7.12 3.79 11.21 13.68 6.28 3.06 9.14. 11~.13 4.17 2.25 6.b2 11.69 7.06 3.31 10.20 13.22 29.63 Root: weight in percent of g. Above-ground weight 37.2 31.96 35..1 32.33 29.2 2Lt.1.8 26.2 32.26 32.2. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 IC TEg Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ~;ES;RicrEo The total root weight for all horizons of the two-meter layer 11.21 tsentner per hectare,. according to the depth varies. from 6.L2 to of the horiw~. The most favorable combination of factors for . fertile the development and functioning of the root system was created by soil tillage to 20 centimeters. 1lhen plowing went down too deep, to 11.0 centimeters, with turn- and the root system was forced from the first days of its over, development into unfavorable nutritional conditions, the yield of the cotton plant was reduced, in spite of a great expenditure of plastic material on root system development (the weight of the roots in this case was )~1.7 percent of the above-ground parts}. If conditions around the root system are so unfavorable as to disturb its physiological functions, its development will be slow and feeble and the plant will be backward, so that it cannot give a normal yield. This is the picture observed with plowing and turn- over. All this goes to show that the root system is extremely sensi- tive to changes in external conditions. The depth of plowing is sharply reflected in the yield. RE. 133 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 YIELD OF LTti'T ACCORDING TO DEPTH OF FERTILIZER APPLICATION IN TSL+;IVT'TER PER HECTARE H A R V E S T Depth of Fertilizer Application First Picking October 10 Fertilizer worked in at. centimeters Fertilizer worked in at 10 centimeters Fertilizer worked in at 20 centimeters Fertilizer worked in at 13O centimeters Fertilizer worked in at 2. and tilled down.. to t.0 centimeters 9.58 Second Picking November 1 Third Picking Change in yield, November Total in tsentner per Hectare ??? 1.59 13.57 9.82 2.31 1.52 13.68 t0,11 6.11 2.1L. 3.58 1Ii.13 }0.56 2.12 9.1i8 11,60 -1.97 9.116 2.22 1.51 13.22 -C.35 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED This data shows that the maximum yield was obtained with plowed depth of 20 centimeters, and that yield of lint was reduced when tillage was only to centimeters deep. Plowing to a depth of 30 - L.O centimeters with turnover of the sur face reduces the total yield of lint to 9, tsentner per hectare, a substantial part of -which was represented by linters, but when fertilizer was applied to the upper layer of the plots, their yield improved to levels among the highest. On fields badly overgrown with weeds, where deep plowing is one of the most important methods of weed control, application of fertilizer can completely eliminate the retardation of phases in the growth of the cotton plant which is observed when the humus layer is depressed to considerable depths below the surface. The greatest total lint yield under 1932 conditions was obtained with fertilizer applied at the 20 centimeter level. But the plots with fertilizer applied at the 10 centimeter level gave the highest yield at the first picking. The 15 centimeter level was not included in this experiment. when fertilizer was applied at the ).O centimeter level, there was no harvest at all up to October 10, as not a single boll had opened on this plot during the entire period. Even as late as November 5, when all the cotton plants involved in the experiment were picked, bolls had opened on only 23 percent of the number of plants on these plots. n the basis of these data, the following conclusions maybe drawn: Varying depth of plowing, which results in marked change in M i36 YII Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 roof system development, also affects to a considerable degree the - round part of the cotton plant and the yield development of the aboveg of lint. The depth of the f ertile horizon and of the fertilizer, ... application play the major roles in this connection. The cotton plant develops well when the fertile horizon (the humus layer of the soil , when plowed and turned over, or the ferti- lized layer) lies no lower than 20 centimeters. is most efficient when its active zone is located A root system at a depth of 10-1 centimeters below the 'surface, if the field is ~ free of weeds and soil moisture is carefully maintained completely throughout the planting period. With plowing down to 20 centimeters and turnover, the quantity of the first picking is somewhat less than with a plowing depth of only lS centimeters, since the former depth brings parts of the less fertile horizon A2 to the surface. It must be assumed that plowing down to the boundary between horizons Al and A2, at 18 centimeters, would give optimum conditions for the cotton plant development. with excessive plowing depth and turnover (Ij.O centimeters), the t1 center of gravity" of the root system is found at a considerable depth, where the unfavorable water regimen and the inferior temperature conditions prevent` biochemicalprocesses from taking place with sufficient energy, Such plowing and turnover, therefore, whileit has a positive effect during the first stages of cotton plant, development, so long as the earth has not yet become packed, affects its further development Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 gE~~AICTED negatively and considerably retards the onset of the various phases. Deep plowing and turnover. does not exert ?n unfavorable. influence` in the sense of retarding the phases if. fertilizer is applied in the upper horizon after the plowing. Depression of the fertile horizon to the U:0 centimeter level by plowing and turnover, followed by introduction of fertilizer at that level, `modifies the ordinary pattern of . root distribution even more, resulting in extremely feeble root development o n the upperh rizon and more vigo-rous development al ong the line of the fertilizer. This has a marked effect on the ,field, since the bolls had opened before the end of the growing season on only 23 percent of the plants in these plots, and the total yield (including linters) was l percent less than that of the control with extremely poor lint quality, as most of it consisted of linters . The results of the experimental data of the study of the effects of deep plowing on the cotton ;Pant under the conditions of the Kherson region are in complete contradiction to the conclusions reached by the experimental irrigational station in the former. Golodnosteppe (Okrug ? ) , where deep plowing to )i.0 centimeters, with turnover, re'- suiting in increasing cotton yields up to LO percent over those ob- tained with plowing to 10 centimeters. j3esides this, as that author notes, deep plowing and turnover accelerates maturation by approximately 20 days (Ye. Fetrov)o Once again this difference emphasizes that the efficiency of any method must of necessity be tested under the same conditions, natural RESTRICTE11 - 138 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R00010021 0002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 LESTR1CTED and historical, in which that method must actually be employed. THE INFLUENCE OF THE AREA OF SUI- LY AND ITS SHAPE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF TNS COTTON ROOT SYSTEM The distribution of the root system in the soil horizons changes not only with depth of plowing and depth of working in ferti- lizer, but also depends to a considerable degree on the area of supply and the shape of that area. The data of the investigation (cf tables) show that the weight of cotton roots varies with the area of supply, and that reduction occurs in the aboveground parts and in fruiting as soon as less moisture, nutrient, etc. become available for the plant under such circumstances. It is observed, however, that when the area of supply is reduced, and the struggle for moisture and nutrients increases, the capacity of the root system for work is considerably increased, and if planting is dense, the root masses come to neigh more than the aboveground parts. LFOr table see page 1L07 If we calculate the yield not per plant 'out per unit area there is a striking change in the picutre; the maximum yield is obtained in the plots with the smallest area of supply. Sowing the plants closer together in rows without reducing the distance between the rows has no adverse effect on the distribution of the root systerri. The growth of the roots on two sides is sufficiert to awsure the normal working capacity of the root system (Figure l4). [For table see page 1.i7 - 13 9 - EU Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Y 0 INFLUENCE OF THE A?s~A OF SUPPLY ON TI-~ DEVELOPMENT OF "'HE ROOT SYSTEM OF TF~ COTTON PLANT (V_'RIETY 1306) of Abo~ea ~round Weight weight of roots Weight of Aboveground er t weight of roots tner in tsen weight of roots percent of in pe asses in kilograms in kilograms n masses in tsen er hectare Aboveground masses ea of Supply A m 0 /ants per 10 P F per 100 plants per hectare p r __ bo x hO 5.62 1.59 23.4 6.2 27.5 6o x 20 5.16 l.zi 43?a 9.3 21.6 6O x 5 2.2) 0.40 7~.6 ii.8 15.8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 INFLUENCE OF THE SFIAPr, OF THE AREA OF SUPPLY ON THE DEtELQPr~NT OF THE ROOT SYSTEM AND YIELD OF TIC COTTON PLANT Weight of roots in kilo rams er hectar e Yield of aboveground mass Shape of the are mall In kilo rams In tsentner o g g of roots in Area of Supply area for each plant roots roots Total per _ 100 plants per hectare. percent o ab e p P p f ov i'aund mates ~ 300 60 x S 7.01 3.28 10.2 15.2 50.67 20.3 300 17X 17 7.97 ).oI 21.01 9.8 32.50 3l~.0 boa 60 x 10 .5.97 2.72 8.69 25.Q l~1.60 20.9 500 25 x 2!~ 5.16 13.7 9.03 17.2 28.60 31.61 1,600 120 x 5 5.6l~ 3.33 8.97 26.2 X3.20 3332 1,200 box 20 1.39 2.51 6.90 38.0 31.63 21.8 1,200 35 x 31. Li.9L 3.50 8.l;h 32.0 26.63 32.7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 1'IESTRICTED In studying the root system of the cotton plant, it is almost always observed that the roots, after arriving at the center of the space between the rows turns downward to horizons with still untapped moisture. This dolArnturn occurs earlier when the area of supply is square than when it is he same size but elongated in shape. In the latter case the roots tap the humus horizon for a loner times On square areas of supply cotton grows well at first, and spreads its roots out in all directions but the laterals of two adjoining rows meet earlier (Figure 16) than where the area of supply is elongated. Wen this happens, the roots leave the humus horizon for less fertile layers. Figure ly. Distribution of the root Figure 16. Distribution of the systera of the cotton plant when root system of the cotton plant grown close together in rows. The when area of supply is square. roots spread out into the spaces The roots soon rieet each other between the rows, and then turn downward. THE INFLUENCE OF MOISTURE ON THE DEVLLOPNENT OF TEIII HOOT SYSTM OF THE COTTON PLANT . It has been ?hown by the experiments of the Ukrainian Zonal Station that yield varies with varying soil moisture, changed by irrigation during various stages of developn~nt of the cotton plant. RESTRIC TED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The same amount of moisture gives varying effects according to the time of irrigation. Very slight increases of soil moisture productivity were resulted from increasing soil moisture during the early stages of development, and in sarr years it even reduced the yield. Irrigation during the flowering phase gave favorable results. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Study of the influence of the time of irrigation showed that during the first stages of development it made the root system less drought resistant. When the u pper horizons had:.:a:;good deal of moisture and the lower horizons were poorer in this respect, the root system did not descend so actively in the soil. When the weather became hot and dry and the upper horizon dried out, the plants with increased moisture requirements now found themselves considerably worse off than the unirrigated plants. Irrigation during the period from budding to flowering had the most favorable effect on the Meld. Irrigation at this time is more effective also by virtue of the fact that it gives the plant an opportunity to use the nutrients in the humus horizon, which usually dries out very t?uch towards the :flowering season, under our conditions. The plant receives nutrients during a critical period and expends less plastic material on spre.ding out its roots through the deeper horizons, where it is necessary, to range an immense volume of soil to get the necessary amount of moisture, thus almost doubling the weight of its roots between flowering and maturation. The root coefficient d' the cotton plant is considerably greater than that of other plants. but it is very subject to change according to conditions. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 REST RICT ED Water Regime Yield of lint in tsentner per hectare Dry mass - lint in tsent- ner per hectare Weight of roots in tsentner per hectare : without irrigation 13.32 23.62 10.56 Irrigation during the flowering phase l5.oL. 34.Z~1 8.6!~ With irrigation during the flowering phase, the weight of the roots was 2; percent that of the aboveground mass, while without irri- gation, which tends to increase the yield of the aboveground mass as a whole, and of lint in particular, it was percent. Thus irrigation during the early stages of development, under the conditions of the new cotton regions of the Ukraine, makes the cotton plant less drought resistant. Irrigation during the period from budding to flowering enables the plant to expend less plastic material on the underground mass and increases yield by supplying moisture and assuring better nutrition during a critical period. The effectiveness of fertilizer varies sharply with the time of irrigation. The maximum effect is obtained by two irrigations during the flowering stage (0-0-2-0) or by one irrigation during the budding stage and another during the flowering stage (0-1-1-0). In the former case irrigation without fertilizer gave increased yield of 26 percent over the control (also without fertilizer), while appli- cation of fertilizer raises the increase from irrigation to 12.3 percent. Study of the root system revealed striking differences between the quantity and method of root distribution on the different horizons. RE1STRii;TEO Weight of roots in percent of aboveground mass 2S.10 - 1L- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 AES1RlC1ED Irrigation and fertilizer shifted the active zone of the he ls.nt was supplied with moisture. and roots to the upper hor~.zons. T p nutrients during a period critical in these respects. The total ab- .ncreased. The weight of the small roots saxbent sufacr of the roots ~. grew, but the ratio of fatal root weight to fatal weight fell, which . . indicates the greater ~e greater productivity with fertilizer; {or table see page 1l77 When. fertilizer is applied and the nutrient position thus ? bee ected not to develop its root system iurproved, the plant mzgh b ~ even a relatively smaller absoxpt:ive surface with the same vigor, since could aasure its nutrient supply. HHowever, it displayed increased fertilizer was applied.. Even when it was moisture requirements when given a single irrigation during the flowering phase; it was still aot s stem vigorously in quest of water. This forced to extend its r y complex, situation leads to the result that when fertilizer is used an t of 'the roots over that in the unfertilized increase in the absolute weigh plats is often observed, although the ratio between root weight and boveground weight is lower than without fertilizer. a TILE ROOT SYS~ "TEM IN THE DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF COTTON A study of the root system in dif f ernt varieties of grains led nclusiom that the rooms are longer,the later A. P. Mode stov to the ca maturing the plant happens to be. In studying two varieties of cotton, the early 1306 and the later '~Triumf Navrotzkiytt, we also noted that under irrigation the latter has " ormer, However, without irrigation, the less of a coat system than the f root system of the two varieties is roughly comparable We present below the results obtained for an area of supply 60 x centimeters. RESTRIC?TEVJ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Fertilizer plus irrigation during the flowering stage Dry mass Weight of roots Y lint in percent of aboveground mass Yield of lent - 2.86 12.7 11.71 31.21 40.7 9.02 3.51t - 12.5 17.13 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Weight of Weight of Total weight Large roots Small roots of roots Fertilizer without irrigation 9.8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 . . . = wem..= - Ratio between weights Above-ground Root weight in of Large Small of large and small Total weight weight ants percent of above- Weight Gen- o Water of _ater Regime of roots tiler per hectare ground weight kilo rams roots roots in kilograms roots In g (I) (2) (3) (h) (5) (6) (7) (I) ROOT SYSTEM OF DIFFERENT COfiPON VARIETIES UNDER DIFFERENT CONDITIONS AND PRODUCTIVITY THEHEOF 4d1TH AREA OF SUPPLY. 60 x 5 CENTIMETERS 1306 without irrigation 51t9 626 0.88 1175 Th? b ~5 ? ~ "Triumf Na rotski " without irrigation 618 H c 1306 under lrrigation t~76 1.3 1091 76.7 1Lt )489 394 1.2a 883 75.5. 11.7. "Triumf NavrotskiT" under irrigation 0.71 1308 91.0 Tf?E SAME, WITH AREA OF SUPPLY 60 x )40 CENTIMETERS 1306 without. irrigation 150 576 763 "Triumf Navrotski " without irrigation 06 1306 under irrigation 33l4 133 309 "Triumf Navrotskiy" under irrigation 1493 52lt 0.9)4 1017 58.8. 17.3 0.9)4 926 143.0 840 147.1 Zs14 14)4.2 50.0 li,..5 21.6 17.8 ~pt4a' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 1306 without irrigation (3) (Li) (5) THE SANE, WITH APJGA OF SLTPPI,Y 60 x 1t0 CENTIMETERS Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 615 23.1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Irrigation thus very strikingly changes the relation between large and mall roots of these varieties. With 1306, the weight of the small roots exceeds that of the large roots without irrigation; in "Iriuinf Navrotskiy", on the con- trary, this occur ?s with irrigation. 'tTxiumf Navrotskiy" was more exigent with respect to moisture, producing a dense network of absorbent roots only under good soil moisture conditions. 1306 Shreder developed a dense network of fine roots without irrigation, and reduced that network under irrigation. Consciousness of agricultural methods and knowledge of the underground factories of plants and of their requirerne-nts will make it possible not only to increase the yield of cotton but also to mark out new paths to the further enhancement of productivity and to develop new methods of progressive agricultural technique. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 y, . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 {ESTRICTED, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 COTTON FERZTLIZERS IN THE 1VEW REGIONS TIE SIGNIFICANCE OF FERTILIZER V. E. Aleksandrov Fertilizers play a tremendous role in the cotton growing of the Soviet Union. In Central Asia and in Transcaucasia, cotton is grown as a rule with fertilizers. Tens of thousands of tons of fertilizers are annually applied to hundred., of thousands of. hectares. This measure is justified by its very considerable effectiveness m Each kilogram of nitrogen intro- duced into the soil results on the average in an additional yield equivalent to 3 kilograms of lint. The application of fertilizer in the new cotton regions has not been studied by the experimental institutions, and consequently down to the present moment fertilizers are still not used in production here. Nevertheless the development of rriethods of chemical soil treat- ment represents a. major new achievement of agricultural technology on the path of strengthening cotton growing in the new regions. Chemical treatment of the o it is particularly important for seed ;rowing purposes. Increasing the coefficient of reproduction of seeds with the aid of fertilizers means accelerating the rate at which the cotton varieties now current will be replaced by new ones of higher productivity and improved fiber qualities. M:c1\TERAL FERTILI ZERS Systematic experiments were commenced in 1930. During the four years from 1930 to 1933, inclusive, over 100 experiments were made at various points in the new cotton areas,, embracing various soil types. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Taman' - Zonal Station Naurska North Caucasus K ray Chestnut Soils Experiment Pont K E NozdokskiY Rayon N _ s 1 Khasav_Yurt, Dagestan ASSR Dark Chestnut soils Dagestan Experiment point Astrakhan Lower Volga Kra y Bro m Soils Kherson Zonal Station Ukraine Odessa Oblast Chestnut chernozems Skadovsk Ukraine, Odessa Oblast Chestnut Chernozems in association Experiment Pont with solonetzes. Brl 'levsk Experiment Point Ukraine, Odessa Oblast SOIL TYPE Light chestnut medium foams in (complexes with solonetzes u association c p to 10 percent). Lower Dnepr clay sands. Akurtovsk Experiment Point Ukral ne9 Dnepropetrovsk Oblast Chestnut Chernozems Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 (I) (2) (3) (13) (5) (6) (7) (s) (9) (io) (l,) 1121 (13) (11t) (15) t16> (17) (l$) Yield in Percent Q 100 100 100 100 rr: ~NPg 108 103 115 111 ~a ::'~?= PK 107 106 lob 108 NK loo 101i lob u3 "-` :vTP 108 105 103 112 108 103 --- 111 lOQ lOG 100 100 loo ioo lco ioo loo ieo loo ioo loo 122 120 113 111 97 131 100 113 108 121 136 111.6 118 121 lob 108 90 121 91 --- 101 --- --- 107.8 120 119 108 111 79 120 101 --- 102 --- --- 109.0 126 118 98 ii1 97 122 106 --- 122 --- --- 109.9 105 122 53 --- 113 98 --- lo)~ --- --- io6 101 120 111 _....w,~ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 The re suits of the experiments showed that even with improper - technique of application, when any effect of the fertilizer was dependent on chance (frequent favorable rains, etc.), the positive role of chemical soil treatirient in increasing the yield of cotton in the new regions was apparent. As may be seen from Table 38 (page 82) fertilizers almost in- variably increased the yield of cotton. In some cases this increase is substantial. The mixture of nitoogen with phosphorus and potash ap- plied at the rate of 60 kilograms per hectare gave an increase of 31 percent in Prikumsk in 1932, in Astrakhan, on the Il' men, of 22 percent in 1930, and of 20 percent in Taman' in 1931. With the relatively high productivity of cotton under experimert station conditions, the absolute increases in yield assume practical operational significance. Such increases are sometimes expressed by Ij..b: 3.3 and 1.9 tsentner per hectare, which should indicate the definite operational importance of mineral fertilizer in the new regions. these cases the return per kilogram of nitrogen is considerably higher than the mean return for nitrogen content of fertilizer in the old regions. The return per kilogram of nitargan was 7.7 kilograms of lint per hectare at Prikumsk in 1932, in Astrakhan, on the I1'men,it was 5.5, and in Taman' in 1931, 3.22 kilograms per hectare. 4 LFor table see page i7 Thus an effectigeness of fertilizer, expressed by a 20 - 30 Besides the examples of' increased yield up to:36 percent, there Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 4 6~J,' N vi Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 MAXIMUM EFFECTIVENESS OF :~'~Ci NFRAL FERTILIZER FOR COTTON IN THE ITET AREAS Yield in Tsentn Additional 'eld Fertilizer Point o F Return er Kilo- xp r of er5.ment Yea p hectare wit out fertile e I ti r t Astrakhan on the: I1'men Taman' - n sentner er hec tare In er h P _ cent ram of nitrogen 1930 1li, 8 3.3 22 5,5 1931 9.7 1.9 20 3.2 ~ Prikumsk 1932 31 7.? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESflICTED were also examples of slight effectiveness. Thus in one case 15 experiments gave no increase in yield at all, and in other cases there was even a negative effect; the yield was reduceds New Regions ----Central Asia l~ experiments in the New Regions 1930-1932 Experiments in 38 Rayons of Central Asia in 1929? Figure 17. Curves of effectiveness of mineral fertilizers in the New Regions and in Central Asia On the diagram in Figure 17 two lines are shown. The heavy line Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 shows the increases in yield, arranged in ascending. order, obtained in l~ experiments in the new regions from the application of nitrogen, phosphor;is and potash at the rate of 60 kilograms per hectare. The second, thin line shows the distribution, in the same order, of the results of experiments made in 38 Rayons of Central Asia in 1929, when 90 kilograms of nitrogen were applied, according to the statistical guide to the effectiveness of fertilizer in Central Asia, issued in 1930 by the Central Asian Fertilizer Station Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 As may be seen from the diagram, both lines almost coincide r: r, along their entire length. The mean values are very close together. The mean increase in yield in the 15 experiments in the new regions was 14.7 percent, while Asia for 3$ Rayons it was 19.9 percent, i.e. a difference in Central of 1.2 percent in all. The results are close together not only in prcent of increase d (difference 1.2 percent) but also in the return per kilogram in yield of nitrogen. The additional yield of lint was-2.5 kilograms per kilogram of nitrogen in the new regions, and 2.S kilograms in Central Asia Comi:fete Fertilizer (NPK) . __Non-nitrogenous fertilizer (PK) Mean : e eta e ; -:.~ p~rcent .. ,,., 7.8 percent I I I _n__ _'..~,.,u ~-- _._.--,_.-.-r._.M "~ l~ o~. 930 2 1931 ~s, 'C }T43- ---- O B~ansk .~.~.~, Khasav-Yuri Naurskaya Astralhan,Taman' Prikumsk herson ,~,~ G Fi ure l$. ENHANCEMENT 0 F PRODUCTIVITY OBTAINED IN THE NETT REGIONS g S BY USE OF IUiINEPAL FERTILIZERS Chemical soil treatment has two advantages in the new regions as compared to Central Asia; the action of potash is definitely beneficial which is not observed in general in Central Asia, and secondly it is lIES fl/Cl'ED ~. x,59 w Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 new regions - nitrogen, phosphorus and p otash- while in the old regions of the approximately equal action of each oi' the three elements in the possible to use non-nitrogenous phosphate-potash fertilizers on account increases in yield are obtained mainly with the aid of nitrogen. On the diagram (Figure 18) the heavy line shows the yield with complete fertilizer (NPK), and the fine line, showing the yield from non-nitrogenous fertilizer (PIS), almost exactly reproduces the first lane at a somewhat lover level, which graphically illustrates the beneficial effect of non-nitrogenous fertilizers, while the data in Table 41 show that the action of phosphorus and potash som.etirrles reaches gains of 21 percent. MAXh1UM ACTION OF NON-NITROGF 10jS FERTILIZER (PK) Increase in Yield In Tsentner W game of Point Year per hectare In Percent Astrakhan, Iltmen 1930 2.7 18 Taman' 1931 2.0 21 Prikwnsk 1932 3.1 21 In view of the imperfections in the technique of application, the results of the experiments to determine the fertilizer requirements of the soils in the new regions cannot be considered final or com- pletely satisfactory as proof. The indications obtained Buring the past three years are plainly under-estimated and may be considered inc- reased in coming years by the application of more perfected methods (the local deep application of fertilizer being studied at the present time etc.). Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 TFT w 161 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 DOSAGE OF NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS Experiments were carried on during two years (1.930 and 1911) at five points simultaneously according to three plans: (a) Mitcherlikh method of determining the soil requirernent of fertilizers, (b) Variable amounts of nitrogen with the amount of phosphorus background remaining constant, (c) Variable amounts of phosphorus with the amount of nitrogen remaining constant, The following amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus were used: 43, 60 75, 90, 120 and 180 kilograms per hectare, The unchanged amount of 60 kilograms per hectare was used for nitrogen or phosphorus, respectively. The results are given in the following table, Thus the experiment of varying dosage within the limits of 60 to l0 kilograms per hectare produced no marked difference of effect either for nitrogen or phosphorus, The mean increase of yield for the five points was 8,4 percent for application of nitrogen and phosphorus at the rate of 60 kilograms per hectare, according to Mitcherlik& s methods, while for the optimum dosage of nitrogen (amount shown in table 37) with constant amount of 60 ]dlograms of phosphorus, the increase in yield was 11.4 percent, or on:Ly about 3 percent greater. The optimum dosage of phosphorus gives even less of a difference; 1,4 percent. Name of Point Khasav -Yurt Taman t Prikumsk Khersan INCREASE OF YIELD OF COTTON GIVEN BY VARYING AMOUNTS OF NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS increase in yield obtained from Increase in yield eld optimum dosage of obtained from NP nitrogen with con- at 60 kilograms , stant amount of 60 in experiment by kilograms of P2O Year Nitcherlikh method per hectare In Percent 1930 8 6 1930 3 21 1931 11 1930 lip lj5 13 120 0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Increase in yield obtained from optimum dosage of . Phosphorus with constant amount of 0 timum dosage of 60 k1l p ograms of Optimum dosage of nitrogen-:per hectare nitrogen er hectare nt p trogen per hectare In Percent) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 grams of nitrogen per hectare; 6 forms in Taman with the same dosage of phosphorus without added nitrogen; 2 forms in Khasav-Yuri in 1930 in dosages of 45 kilograms per hectare, nitrogen being 45 kilograms for the forms of phosphorus. Four forms of phosphorus were tried at Prikumsk in 1930 with dosages of 60 kilograms per hectare and 45 kilo-- The right half of the diagram shops almost the same results per hectare, THE TECHNIQUE OF FEfTILIZER. APPLICATION The question of method of application is basic in any study of the action of mineral fertilizers in the new cotton regions. The colossal importance of the technique of fertilizer appli- cation was already shown in 192$ by the results of experiments carried out as early as 1928 in Central Asia by the Fertilizer Station (launch). ~Stisicau_wto the i'' ~nessq of Fertilizers in Central Asia, Method of 4pplic ati on Broadcast In the rows 3.4 13.7 20.4 Fertilizer applied 9.0 38,5 35.4 before planting cotton It is clear from these examples that local application of fertilizer, worked in at various depths; increases the percentage of of additional yield due to fertilizer by 1,5 to 3,0 times, as corn- pared to broadcast application, :In turn, the depth 'to which fertilizer was worked in increased this additional fertilizer yield by 4 - 6 times both with local and continuous application. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Experiments on fertilizer application methods were commenced in 1932 in the new regions, was amost doubled when :Fertilizer was plowed into the furrows to a depth of 15 centimeters during the shallow winter breaking, rather than broadcast during the same plowing INCREASE OF COTTON YIELD DUE TO V'dUOUS MiUHODS OF APPLYING FERTILIZER, KHERSON, 1932 Lint Yield In tsentner Conclitions of Experiment per hectare In percent Remarks Control; no fertilizer 9.3 100 Broadcast application of fertilizer during shallow whiter breaking Plowing erti1izer :Lito the furrows 'ho depth of 15 centimeters during shallow winter breaking Application of fertilizer in the spring in the furrows, 5 centimeters from the rows, at a depth of 15 centimeters, The data shows that the additional yield 9,9 At the rate of 60 kilograms of nitro- . 103 gen and phosphorus At the rate of 60 kilograms of nitro- gen and phosphorus 10.4 111 10.8 115 At the rate of 60 kilograms of nitro-- gen and phosphorus This experiment, carried out in Prikumsk, showed that local application of fertilizer at different depths produced a satisfactory effect, with yield increments of 20 - 23 percent, and indicating a ten- dency to strengthened action of fertilizer with increasing depth of application. The gradation between the depth selected was only 2 centimeters, which wu,s too small; this was a shortcoming of the ex- periment organization and explains the small difference in favor of deeper application; only 3 percent, iiESFtiiC - 16 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 jti~` a L'4i ,j 1-j Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Lint yield In tsentner Conditions of Experiment per hectare In percent Remarks Control, without fertilizer 11.9 100 Application at 5 centimeter depth 11.2 120 Application at 7 centimeter depth 11.2 ? 120 14.6 123 The high effectiveness of fertilizer 8,t Prikumsk in 1932 is striking. The fertilier was generally broadcast on the suface and worked in lightly by harrow. Here it must be stated that Frikwnsk in 1932 was an exception; in this case the fertilizer was applied with the aid of a sowing drill combine (?t it tvort-DedinaIt ) the drill furrow openers of which worked in the fertilizer to a depth of 7 - 8 centimeters. At the present time the work on chenucal soil treatment in the new regions isJirected mainly towards the study of the action of fertilizers on local and deep application. In American cotton growing practice, where very high coefficients of utilization are obtained from fertilizers, local and deep application is the usual method. The applied fertilizer, in the presence of soil moisture is at first rapidly assimilated by the soil microorganisms and passes into the living protein of bacteria]. bodies. In this form the nutrients are unavailable for the higher plants, and for this reason nitrates are often found to be absent from the soil during the flowering period of the cotton plant, in spite of the application of nitrogenous fertilizers Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 :ESiRICTED during the spring. This happens because the soil bacteria intercept the nutrient elements on their way to the cultivated plants and do not leave them their share of the nutrient elements in mineralized form at threquired moment. ~Nthen fertilizer is applied locally, the contact surface between applied fertilizer and soil is several times smaller than when it is. applied by continuous broadcast, in consequence of which its coefficient of utilization is three times as great, as for instance in the Kaunchy experiment. Deep application of fertilizer has a long series of advantages. In the first place, the number of soil bacteria grows less as it goes deeper into the plowed horizon, If fertilizer is introduced below the plowed horizon, for instance at the 30 - 40 centimeter level, it will remain almost entirely untouched by bacteria, awaiting its uti- lization by the plant roots. In this case full use may be expected to be made of it, with a rise to maximum value of the coeficient of utilization to the maximum, The mean value of the coefficient of effectiveness for nitrogen in central Asia is approximately equal to 3, while single experiments give as much as 10 - 15. According to data in the American literature this value has risen to 30 in some experiments. When the depth of fertilizer application is increased,' its introduction beneath the plant to be fertilized is achieved while broadcast fertilizing produces a fertilizing of the soil. Deep application makes it possible to introduce fertilizer a ESTRICTEO -l67 1f334 ' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Method of A pplication Control; no fertilizer EFFECTIVENESS OF LOCAL APPLICATIONS OF FERTILIZERS AT KHF;RSON Yield of Lent` i ~ in Tsentner e pr Hectare Broadcast before shallow Winter. breaking f'4 0' Plowed into furrows during shallow winter brea ksng centimeters to the side of the rows at 1 s centimeter level during sowing on both sides of taws centimeters away, at 1 centimeter level Burl n g g sowing 0.07 0.08 0.11 0.12 0.13 Increment of yield J1 ercent 10 62 68 91 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Lines of Equal Mean Annual Temperatures (Isotherms) ,,r- . N_ , ~-Lines of Equal Mean Annual Precipitation (Isohyetal Lines) Lines of Equal Frost-Free Periods, in days Rivers Railroads Figure 2. CLIMATIC MAP OF THE NEW COTTON REGIONS OF THE USSR PRECIPITATION The new cotton areas are characterized by a wide range of variation in annual precipitation; from 169 millimeters in Astrakhan' to 6. millimeters in Krasnodar ('Table 11 on page 28), but a certain uniformity is obserred in the distribution of this precipitation among the various months of the year. Thus there is more precipitation during the summer months and generally during the summer half of the year than during the winter half. The smallest percentage of the annual precipitation fails during early autumn, that is during the second half of August and September. In some places this is also true of October. Such an average distribution of precipitation is very favorable for the harvesting of cotton crops. With annual precipitation under 300 millimeters, unirrigated cotton growing becomes doubtful, but this conclusion is far from having no exceptions. Thus on the Ukrainian seacoast (Skadovsk, Ochakov, Genichesk), precipitation is 2L8 - 299 millimeters, and yet these places belong to the areas which are most predominately devoted to cotton growing in the Ukraine. On other hand, Dagestan has precipitation ranging from 361 millimeters in Derbent to 198 millimeters in Khasav-Yuri, and yet most of the cotton itSTR9CTE0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 In this case broadcast application gave the insignificant increment of 15 percent, while local application gave 69 percent. action of fertilizer was accompanied by acceleration of maturation by 10.5 days as compared with the control, and in consequence the pre- frost harvest was shar:1y increased. The latter was almost 6 times as great as the control with local application, and about 5 times with broadcast application. These results were obtained under the excep- tionally unfavorable conditions of 1933 for cotton growing in Ukraine and Crimea, and of course cannot be used as the basis for final evalua- tion of the effectiveness of fertilizer in the new regions. Deep fertilizer application has the very useful quality of being readily adapted to mechanization,, since it may be done simultaneously with plowing, sowing or cultivation of the cotton plant, according to the need for fertilizer t a given time. The method of scattering fertilizer by hand out of a pail, which is widely used in Central Asia, inust be replaced in the near future by mechanized methods of application. The Mechanization Department of NOVNIKhI (Comrade Bronitskiy) has developed a device for attachment to drills or plows for applying fertilizer in solution or in powder form during cotton sowing or during plowing. Two extra "shoes for fertilizer application are attached to the Armalitov two-row cotton seeding drill (Figure 20) through which fertilizer is fed through a rubber tube in a solution or powdered form. The fertilizer in-the tank is stirred by an agitator activated by a chain drive. The shoes introducing the fertilizer are adjustable by means of a yoke attachment in a lateral direction along the chassis Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ESTRICTED of the drill and also for depths up to 20 centimeters, The same device may be readily transferred from drill seeder to plow LThe plowshares have been removed from the plow, as the photo- graph was taken after applying fertilizer to a plowed field for applying fertilizer during the plowing. It can be adjusted to a depth of 40 centimeters . Figure 20~ Device for applying mineral fertilizer. with a tVw?-row Armalit seed drill seeder. The two shoes (i) apply the fertilizer, which is introduced :Lrom the trnk B through the rubber tubes CC. A drill seeder with the device for applying fertilizer was tested in the spring of 1933 at Frikumsk, where it performed ex- cellently in handling cotton planting and simultaneous fertilizer app- lication. But application of fertilizer in liquid form suffers from the great disadvantage that 40 50 pails of water are needed to dis- solve the fertilizer for a single hectare, which represents an extra- ordinary burden under operating conditions. The device is more suitable for application of fertilizer in the dry form, as is done in American cotton-growing practice. In the United States fertilizer is applied to cotton in small amounts three times a year, which increases the coefficient of fertilizer utilization. TRICTED -192 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 I%EST MGI ED But use of fertilizer in liquid form also has many advantages, since it allows the simplification of fertilizer manufacturing processes. Figure 21~ Device for applying mineral fertilizer by plow. Shoe (A) through which fertilizer is applied, coming from the tank (B) through the tube (C). There are two stages in the process of preparation of manu- facturing nitrogenous fertilizers. The first is the combination of the ammonia with an acid, usually sulphuric acid, after which the finished product is obtained ready for use as fertilizer in the form of ammonium sulphate. More infrequently, the ammonia is combined instead with nitric acid. The product - ammonium nitrate, or amrnonia saltpeter - has the disadvantage of being highly hygroscopic, The use of sulphuric acid for the sole purpose of fixing amonia as ammonium sulphate represents a great expense in fertilizer manufacture. Sulphuric Acid, moreover, is in short supply for other branches of industry. The method of applying fertilizer in liqutd form allows the use of ammonia without combining it with sulphuric acid. the academician D, N. Pryanishnikov reports the follotivIng on this subject,"Basic tasks in the application of Chemistry to Agriculture". Leading article in the, Fertilizer Handbook, issued in 1933 by the NTU NKP under the editorial supervision of academician E. V. Britske and L. L. Balashevj ttWe may also recall the suggestion that ammonia in aquaeous solution be used directly as fertilizer. This idea came up in the Nitrogen Institute in connection with the question of the long-distance or'ESTRICiE'D Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 iESTRICTE1J transportation of liquified ammania in tanks; to reduce the pressure it might be absored into ammonium or calcium nitrate. Such "ammoniates!t could be transported far more safely than pure ammonia, and they could then be used on the site after some addition of water as a row fertilizer applied during planting(the Omsk Agricultural Machinery Experiment Station is now working on such combine drill seeders)". The question of whether to use fertilizer in liquid or dry form will thus be decided after careful study of the technology of fertilizer manufacture, its transportation to the place of use, and economic computation of the relative costs The NOV?NIKhI drill seeder is one of the types already developed for these purposes, which is in need of a certain amount of modification to adapt it for practical operational use Decomposition of the organic constituents of manure proceeds slowly in the extremely. arid belt of the south of the USSR, and their influence is conserved for very lone periods. For instance, in ex- periments at the Ukrainian Zonal Station (Kherson Area), manure was last applied in 1915 From 1901: to 1915, 2400 puds of manure per desyatin were applied to the fallow field in a three field system of crop rotation. Consequently, during 15 years, a total of 12,000 puds were applied in the course of five applicationsw7, and to this day, 16, 17 and 18 years afterwards, its after-effect is still observed In 1931 cotton gave an increment of 37 percent, 4.3 t s entner per hectare, for t1i. manure applied 16 years before ; in 1932, 17 years afterwards, it still gave an increment of 27.7 percent, or 2,6 tsentner per hectare. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Such long and powerful action of manure fertilizer should rather be considered soil melioration rather than a mere cultural practice. Where sources of iLnure are available, it makes sense to apply it in large amounts under cotton plantings once every ten or twenty years. The former Kherson Station, on the basis of long-term data on the calculation of the effect of manure, was unable to reach this not to cotton, which was planted for the first time in this experiment only in 1931. conclusion only because the calculations referred to grain crops and The manure and mineral fertilizers were applied in spring before planting. Even with such late application of manure, when only a short time still remained for its mineralization, it. Estill produced a greater effect than mineral fertilizers. The action of manure was accompanied by considerable acceleration of vegetative growth, which w.s reflected The positive action of manure fertilizer begins in the first year after it is applied and is more powerful than that of mineral fertilizers. The following experiment was carried out at Kherson in 1932 L or table see page l7c in the increase of the pre--frost harvest, the increment of which amounted to 42 percent. The experiment in 1933 at the Taman' Zonal Station is another example of the effect of manuring. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RF.T,ATIVE EFFECT OF MANURE AND MINERAL FERTILIZER H a' Total Yield of Lint In . tsentner Increment per In tsentner Fert111~er hectare per hectare percent Control; no 12,.2 fertilizer Manure at the rate of of 180 kilograms nitrogen trvgen per hecf~.re 691 3.9 32 Pre-Frost Period In Increment tsentner per n tsentner hectare per hectare In Percent Y r o 8.6 2.2 Ammonium sulphate at the rate of 180 lcilograms of nitrogen per hectare 1lt.l 1.9 6.2 -0.2 Mineral fertilizer 18 . NPK l .8 2.6 21 7.6 1.2 nl Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 r ItEST RICT ED t ljF~~,v~NU~:.if FM rM EFFECT OF MANURING DURING THE FIRST YEAR 4 4fE'a( Total yield of lint Increment In tsentner In tsentner . per hectere per hectare In percent Control without fertilizer 6,6 Manure - 20 tsentner per b hectare 9.0 2.4 3 Sincq. large quantities: uf~"manure are unavailable on a' large- . _ .., scale mechanized farm, other ways must be sought of obtaining or- ganic substances instead of manure but with the same specific pro- perties of melioration. The favorable qualities of the perennial grasses, for in- stance alfalfa, are well known. IN . I. Bykov, The Influence of_Alf alf a and Continuous Cropping of Cotton on Soil StructureBy plowing under alfalfa as a green manure, improvement in structure and porosity of the soil is obtained, together with enhancement of the yield of various crops, including cotton (Central Asian experiment), The wastes of agricultural production - straw, cotton stalks, locks of cotton bolls, sea weed, etc, - may serve as another source of organic material, besides manure. To avoid denitrification (in the broad sense of the term) during the first year after manure isplowed under, the supplementary use of small amounts of mineral fertilizers, nitrogen and phosphorus, has been suggested in conjunction with manure, as an attractive nutrient for the bacteria that transforms the carbon of the carbohydrates of` the straw and cotton stalks into an organic mass, If this question is decided in the affirmative, new prospects of increased cotton yields will be in sight. RES TRIO TED - 177 w Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 IES TR1CTF The experiments with plowing under of cotton stubble and s aw without a primer of mineral fertilizers showed no negative effects. Under the conditions of the arid belt of the south, the processes of decomposition take place slowly, rend the biological fixation of the mobile soil nitrogen during decomposition is not so great as to check the development of crops TA~J[AN t 'ZONAL STATION, 1933 Total Yield 1, in Increment Fertilizer Tsentner per-hectare in percent Control 6,0 Cotton stalks, 60 kilograms per hectare 7.0 6 Kamka (an alga) 7.0 . Cotton stalks and kamka algae applied at the Taman' Zonal Station in the autumn of 1932 gave slight increases in cotton yield in the following season, 1933 - amounting to 6 percent, (Table 45), In the autumn of 1933, when the cotton plants were taken up during the plowing of the field, undecomposed remains of stalks;.were still encountered, showing how slow were the processes of decomposition. For table see page l77 In another experiment at Kherson cotton stalks and straw were applied in the spring before . planting , Even in this case there was no reduction in yield, and a slight increment of 3 - 5 percent was obtained. (Table 460 EU 178 ., k6 4-Idr Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Pre-frost Total yield ield in y Increment Increment t in {sentner i s oer Fertilizer per hectare Absolute Percentage per hectare Absolute Percentage P UKRAINI:~N ZONAL STA TIOP1 1932 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Control 12.2 Cotton stalks 16 kilograms per : - hectare 12.8 ,0.6 Straw, 16 kilo- grams per hectare 12.6 Manure 13.9 1.7 13 7.6 1.2 18 s Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 'FIESTRICTED As a positive feature the acceleration of maturation of cotton... must be noted, The total increment is included in the pre-frost har- vest, and amounted to 0,6 - 0,5 tsentner per hectare, or 7 - 9 percent, These two examples of ploy d.n under ~ cotton stalks cannot guarantee against cases of unfavorable action by this procedure, In some cases which are favorable for intensified dec omposa.ta. on, for instance., sharply increased preci itatio p n..may result in a reduction of yield comparable to that. shaven by the. 1933 ..flower-pot experiments at Prikumsk. YIELD OF LINT IN GRAMS FROM POT-GRQVI~N PLANTS Fertilizer Soil Moisture do 50 ercent of 0 timum V clue .~ 70 Control 5.9 9.7 Cotton stalks, 30 grams per pot 6.7 8.7 In a dry environment (50 percent of optimum moisture content) comparable to the field experiments, the ~ yz.eld increment was 19 per- cent. The cotton stalks in the pot failed to decompose completely during the summer. In each environment (70 percent of full moisture content) where decomposition was better, 10 percent diminution of yield was obtained. The numerical data on the experiments with organic fertilizers appears very modest in extent, Conse`uentl ~ Y the quest'ion of organic fertilizers at the present time is'still open and its study has just commenced. ` Therefore all judgements on the subject presented here must be carefully reinforced by suitable experdmental evidence, lIESrRrcrEO Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 1E#O - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 R ESTR%CT EU FERTILIZERS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE COTTON PLANT Fertilizer introduced into the soil acts on the internal arm ganization of the plant structure producing a number of external modifications in it. Increase in the y.>r eld of plants subject to fertilizer action is one of the consequences of these modifications, namely; First increase of .productivity is as a rule accompanied by accelerated vegetation, In pot experiments this acceleration attained values of over 20 days, SPEEDING THE DEVELOPII!NT OF COTTON GR0 DING WITH FERTILIZERS Number of days by iit P ?s which - Fertilizer onset of maturation was accelerated Astrakhan (Hillocks 1~3 p NPK 24 Astrakhan (Hillocks) NP 20 Kherson, 1930 N Kherson, 1931 NP In field experiments, the acceleration observed amounted to 10 days, Acceleration of maturation is usual in cases where there is a substantial effect on productivity, In cases _where no increment of ya.eld has been noted after use of fertilizer, or, only a small in- crement, there is usually also no acceleration of maturation 4QE5TR1 181 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED Such action by mineral fertilizers to reduce fungus diseases of cotton plant s must unquala.fiedl y be held to exert ,.an influence on its productivity as well, the more so as the density of stand of the plants is modified in this case. Mortali~y was reduced by S percent by application of nitrogen and phosphorus, and by l5 percent on application of patash,- xt may be noted as a general conclusion that it is most. necessary to work up as rapidly as oss' p ible the questions involving chemical treatment of the soil in the new cotton regions as a new weapon. in the struggle for high yields in the socialist fields, withspecial attention to working out the question of the technique of deep local application of fertil , izers and also the question of the best periods for their application. 183 ~. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 'ESIAOCTEA THE ]NFIIUENCE ~~, AI,FAFA AND CONTINDUS GRC~FII~G QF C2N aIi IL STRUCTURE SG Tork done in 1931 at Dagestan Base (formerly Dagestan Zonal Station). (f Bykov The problems involving increased emphasis on the cotton component of crop rotations - increased intensity of cotton cul- tivation - still await scientific solution. The field e*periments on continuous cropping of cotton, under way now for six years at Khasav-Yuri, have not yielded a clear and distinct answer as to the possibility of this practice. At the Dagestan Zonal Station a deeper investigation of this problem was commenced by the parallel study of the influence' alfafa and continuous cropping of cotton on soil structure, which constitutes the decisive factor in the biological activity'of the soil and of agricultural plants as well. OBJECTS OF INVESTIGATION Three basic forms of cultural soil condition were the objects of the investigation: continuous cropping, six-field crop rotation, and alfafa. The field under continuous cropping of cotton, started in 1926, gives high yields every year, showing what the possibilities are for continuous cropping of cotton during the course of a con- siderable. number of years with no unfavorable results apparent on. summary inspection: The six-field crop rotation, recommended for former cotton.'- fields in the foothill zone of unirrigated cotton growing, was IIES T TED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 EST RICTEB started in 1926 with the following rotation: . 1. Green fallow in vetches.. 2. Winter wheat. 3. Cotton. 4. Soy Bean ? 5. Cotton. 6. Guts. . The third object of the study was a field sown with Turkestan alfafa in 192 and not tilled at all, with the exception of a i light shallow plowing in autumn of 1930? All three fields had rich, dark-chestnut carbonate loams, the structure of which could be judged from a soil profile taken near the continuous cotton cropping field. The A horizon was of dark chestnut color with brown tinge, of granular structure (or more precisely of stratified granular structure) and of mellow texture ? Its mechanical composition was loamy; the transition to horizon A 2 was so gradual as to be hardly noticeable; its thickness was 22 centimeters. Harizon A 2 was lighter in color, also with a tinge of brown, of crumble-granular structure; packing was observed at lower levels of this horizon; mechanical composition loamy; thickness 25 centimeters. Horizon i 1: color light chestnut, with tinge of gray; texture crumbling; marked: packing of entire horizon; structure somewhat fissile; segregation of carbonates (pseudomycellar) observed; considerable number of worm-holes; mechanical composition loamy; transition to. next horizon. clear-cut; thickness 24 centimeters ? Horizon B 2: chestnut to pale yellow in color;, texture crumbling, structure somewhat fissile, segregation of carbonates in form of beloglazok; '' large shrew passages; thickness 25 centimeters. Horizon C; color . V4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 a siaicio light chestnut with tinge of gray; structure dense and sornevthat fissile; considerable segregation of Belog lazok; mechanical com: position loamy. Note Efflorescence of chlorides `strong on horizon Al and continuous on the other horizons. ELENTS OF 'T'HE TNV E TIGATION There are two ways in which the study of soil stru' cture may be conducted. The first is to regard soil structure as di- visibile into separate units (aggregates), dif'f Brent in size and form (S.A. Zaknarov); i.e. the morphological approach.. to the study of structure, by dividing the sample of soil into fractions according to the size of the structural elements and classifica- tion of soil structure according to' content of aggregates of var- ious diameters and of single grains. The second method of study follows from the conception of soil structure as the relation of capillary and no rY n _capillary porosity, the decisive significance of which has been demonstrated within exceptionally convincing manner by- the re Y researches on the TSKnA experimental field. This relation redete r p rma,nes the expres_ sion and tendencies of all physical, chemical and biological pro- cesses in the soil, thus identifying the concept of soil structure with that of the texture of the soil as the relation of capillary and non- capillary porosity. Thence follows the physiological essence of structure and the special methods of study worked out b Ts" by knA, of which. the basic princip.1e 'is the taking of samplesttof undisturbed structure", and in which the general capillary and non--capillary porosity are the elements of investigation. ' To obtain a more complete picture, the study of soil structure 'IES Thu TED !db Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ti EST ~ICTEO was carried on by these two parallel methods, embracing both mor phologieal and physiological elements of soil structure, as well as the stability of soil aggregates, defined as the capacity of structural elements to resist the disintegrating action of water. (Vileyams). As is generally known, soils of unstable structure are rapidly pulverized, are easily washed away by rains, form ~ In crux ta-c xons and lose all the advantages of structured soils. The basic elements of the investigation thus appear to b morphology of structure (quantitative and qualitative analysis of structural elements), total porosity, capillary and non-capilk rY porosity, and stability of structure. E'Rf~~IIlV TAL PROCEDLrRE The Puchner method was used as the basis in the mo rpho- logical study of structure. Batches of soil weighing 200-300 grams were first strewn from a height of 1 meter and then separated into fractions by sifting through sieves of sizes corresponding to the structural elements. 71 Each analysis was repeated twice, i. e. two batches were taken from each sample. The samples were taken from 10 points in a field, arranged in checkerboard order. 5 samples were taken at each point at the depth of the plowed horizon (20'centimeters . A total of 150 samples was thus taken from the three fields. Quantitative (structural) analysis and qualitative estimation of the separate structural elements was Carrie d.out on these samples. ~~~YYY TfiI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 TED rah Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 . ESTRiTEO tae study of porosity was made by the established -method worked out at the TSKnA Experimental Field using soil samples t'of undistrubed structure.n Instead of special drills for tak- ing the samples, ordinary cylinders of galvanized Iron, 10 cen- tizneters in diameter and 20 centimeters high were used,. and proved entirely adequate for the purpose. Five determinations of porosity were made in each case. Determination of structural stability was by t y he method developed by ~Cmlin (Perm'), by which the la rbe aggregates are determined after capillary saturation b "bat y hinge in sieves. A. few modifications were made in this method; thus the tak ing of an intermediate sample from unscattered soil was eliminated. The batches of soil were saturated on filter paper and not by placing in a sieve over water (Sobolev). The aggregates not washed down were transferred to a.glass . jar, and thence to the filter paper. After filtration, the soil: was dried in a th ermostate at 100 - 105 degrees and weighed. The quantities of aggregates not washed down was calculated in percent of an absolutely dry batch with correction for the number of mechanical particles larger than 0. 6 millimeter. Only four fractions were selected for analysis. Their size is shown in the corresponding tables. Five determinations were made for each structural fraction separately, on 30 gram soil batches. Each batch ~I was ba,t3edtt .30 times in a' 0.5 millimeter sieve, RESULTS OF THE INVES TIGATION /Morphology of structure. The results of he investigation of dEi)kfl,ICCt'O B b' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ESTRICTD soil morphology and the numerical data for the separate elements are shown in the diagram (Fig. 22) and the corresponding table, and indicate a definite relationship between soil structure and the various cultural states of the soil. In the given instance, indu'bjtable improvement of structure by alf'afa cultivation is emphasized, while, on the contrary, continuous Cropping results in considerable deterioration in the composition of 'the struc- tural elements, by way of pulverization; the dust ~ fraction is almost doubled thereby (10.18 to 19.40 percent). The composition of the structural elements of soil in the six-field crop rotation shows that rotation has no particular influence on imporvement of soil structure since the total dust fractions is 19.4 percent after continuous cropping ~, and 19.3 per- cent after crop rotation; and on the whole the data indicate that while soil structure after alfafa may becharacterized as crumble-granular, it may be characterized as granular-dusty after crop rotation or continuous cropping. 'tr ,ta I1 The structural elements of all the objects under study may ~ under study may Pv~ be classified, according to external appearance , into two groups; the first is composed of flat crumbs with smooth surfaces and clearly defined corrugations along one axis , while structural ele- ments of the second group has an apparently irregular outline with uneven surface, as 'though corroded, often with minor granulations, nodules and cylinders, which are composed of worn. ..excrement . FIG. 22 INFLUENCE OF' ALFAFA, Cf P ROTATION AND C N CNUQUS CRC.1'PING ON SOIL STRUCTORE Alfafa - _ ?- M - Continuous Cropping ? Crop notation Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 aESTRtI EU Thus, while the first group of form of structured elements may be considered the primary group, produced by dynamic forces, the second form of structure, of later formation, is obviously the result of worm activity. (see figure #2) The total porosity appears directly to reflect the results of the structural analysis. The greater the pulverization of the soil, the lower the porosity, and conversely, lower pulverization of the soil results in greater porosity. Increased porosity is observed when alfafa is grown, while a distinct reduction in its value occurs on continuous cropping. The six-field crop rotation however given results close to those for continuous cropping, since the small, insignificant difference between the mean values for the two may fall with- in the limits of experimental error. CAPILLARY AND NON-CAPILLARY POROSITY The total porosity is expressed by the sum of capillary and non- capillary interstices. The parts played by these in the life of the soil and in plant life are not the same. Capillary porosity conditions the supply of soil moisture (if the surface capillaries are broken dotivn) and the passage of moisture and nutrients into the plant roots, while non-capillary porosity assures a.favorable atmospheric regimen and the pene- tration of moisture .into the soil, which in turn assures tea suc- cessful approach to the resolution of the antagonism observed between water-and air in the soil: each of them taking its own share of the porosity, moisture taking the capillary porosity, lIESraflcrEo Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 TOTAL SOIL POROSITY IN PERCENT OF ITS VOLUME Continuous Cropping Crop Rotation ~ Alfalfa Remarks 49. o7 tj9.3a 51.06 52.8? 5.23 Average 50.75 51.77 Average 51.91 52.27 52.19 50.81 58.5b 55.8t. Analyses and 55.19 computation by 55.15 Average 55.65 V. V. Maloyan. 56.5t~ 55.52 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 w~+yc~~~w t-' tS`ti Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RELATIONSHIP OF STRUCTUHE TO CULTURAL CONDITION OF SOIL (Analysis and computation performed by V. V. Maloyan and V. G. Bakhmenin) SZ~.Zr~ ntiESm R~H'~'.3'd;e3.i~aeCLF'p~+~, taAY.tF~i Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 of Parcel Crop Rotation 23.E t 5.1 8.1~ f 1.3 9.3?0.8 21.6?1.0 ~?7+1.6 11.612.0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 El ES 4FIC TED and air the non-capillary porosityt~ (s.~. Zakharov).' In the metaphorical language of Professor Kvasniko v, the network of capillary interstices forms a eculiar s p ystem of 'blood circula',tiontf, through which Uninterruptedly courses n the blood~~ of the soil - the soil solution (1' uid phase). The network of non-capillary interstices represents a ttrespirator t~ s y ystem through which moves the soilairp These elements of soil structure play so exceptionally im-- portant a role as to predetermine all of the most important soil processes. Passing now to the consideration of, the figures presented in the tables, a definite relationship again appears between pulverization of the soil and the values for capillary porosity and also a distinct and regular variation of capillary porosity with the various different cultural conditions o f the soil. CAPILLARY AND NON-CAPILLARY POROSITY OF THE SOIL, IN PERCENT OF ITS VOLUTE Continuous Cropping i ~ Crop rotation Alf of a ~OI 1 NON CAPyjaLARY CAPILLARY CAPILLARY NON CAPILLARY CAP ILL. 1Y CAPILLARY RE 'iARKs 4176 7,31 X167 7,71 39 37 to Analyses 438 778 7 L~2~21 10,63 366l 18,58 and corn- putztion )4395 72 8 62 X2,04. L 9,73 39O7 16 O8 by V, V, Malo a ? . 1, L.317 8,L$ 39O1 ~ 17,53 y n 4330 7 Si ? 44?44 91O 37 96 17 56 . 779 . ~ L2,82 9,12 38L O 17,2L~. The more the soil is pulverized, the treater the capillary porosity, and, on theother hand, a lower dust content of the soil results in lower capillary porosity and increased total and non Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 NON CAPILLARY POROSITY IN PERCENT OF TOTAL POROSITY CONTIINOUS CROPPING CROP ROTATION ALFAFA lLi., 90 15,61 29,L~.9 20,11 33,67 15,37 value 153) 18,79 value 175 29,16 value 30,99 16, L.0 1Lj.,78 16,19 31,00 17,00 31,62 The results of the investigation show the most favorable ratio between capillary and non-capillary porosity to be assured by growing alfafa, Structural Stab:i. 1i y. At the present time, the term structural stability means the capacity of soil aggregates to resist the disintegrating action of water (Vil'yams). Structural stability is due to "the release of calcium as the cathion Ca'from organic compounds by the composition of the remnants of dead roots, and its absorption by the ailorphous col- loidal, humus. The colloids containing the bivalent cathions so , absorbed, including CA", lose the capacity of dispersing their granules in water, and form colloidal solutions, Under alJ. cir-. cumstances they become insoluble in water, and, therefore amor- phous, colloidal humus., after absorption of CA" cathions cements the soil aggregates with the elastic and absolutely insoluble ce- ment, which also gives the soil crumbs stability; the property of not disintegrating in water" (Vll'yams). Structural stability is thus due above all to the presence of organic remains in the soil, and consequently it will be a Y at maximum when the plowed horizon is rich in organic matter, i`ESj t1 D ra~r~ !I,it~w Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ,f ESTRICTED Alfafa leaves the largest amount of organic matter in the form of root residues,. while continous cropping of cotton leaves only an insignificant amount of organic matter in the plowed horizon. It is entirely clear that the greatest struc- tural stability is observed with alfafa? There is no definite relation between structural stability uctuTal fractions; whence only the methodo- and the separate str loical conclusion can be drawn that for purposes of aggregate analysis soil samples of mixed fractions can entirely define it. A distinct picture of definite regularity is observed how- e data for hor:Lzontal rows, showing that alfafa growing ever in th in a more stable structure than continuous cropping or results crop rotation. of struc- PERCENTAGE OF AGGREGATES NOT V ASEDD OUT Size tural elements Continuous Cropping crop Rotation Alf fa -_ ... 82 .00 1A6o 79 ~ + O%79 89 73 + 1 ,17 8l89 ~ l,66 8026.120 8961 + 0,88 81 2+204 82,28+iL8 88,,27+091. 8l72 1 L 81, 81+ 1,18 89,38 ' l O3 Average....... ~ , CONCLUSIONS The following conclusions may be drawn from the exper imen- tal data. a definite relation of dependence between soil 1. There is structure and the different crop plants, 2, Conta. 'nuous cropping of cotton leads to deterioration. structure in all elements of the investigation. of soil Alfafa growing aids in the regeneration of soil struc-- 31 L i7 - /ff i_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ture by improving the quantitative composition of structured elements, increasing the total and non-capillary, porositY, re- ducing capillary porosity, creating the most favorable ratio between capillary and non-capillary porosity, and distinctly increasing structural stability, 24. Six-field drop rotation without perennial grasses is of no particular value in reestablishing soil structure. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED SOWING AND MANAGEYIENT OF COTTON IN THE NEW AREAS P. A. Yakhtenfel' d The yield of lint in the New Cotton Areas still remains at an inadmissably low level, Yields are obtained every year at the Zonal Stations and bases distributed throughout the entire cotton belt of the New. Areas which are 6 to 8 times the mean operating yields. Dozens of the best kolkhozes obtain, year after year, high yields, close to these of the experimental institutions. This spread between mean yields and maximum yields will undoubtedly be liquidated during the next few years, The results of the experience accumulated by the institu- tions for scientific research and by the best farms of the young cotton production branch in the New Areas will help to liquidate this spread very speedily. ongI, with its network of Zonal Stations and Bases thro~ighout the New Cotton Areas of the Ukraine, Crimea and North Caucasus, has obtained basic results during these years of work (1931-1933) that clarify the peculiar features of the technique of the cultivation of cotton in the most northerly cotton region of the world. The technique of cotton growing in the New Areas is sub- stantially different from that used in the irrigated cotton grow- ing areas of Central Asia and from that used in the cotton belt of North America, It is an urgent task to equip all workers in the New Cotton Areas with a knowledge of these peculiarities. Since this work of orientation. is on the whole based on the results of numerous field experiments, the basic elements in RESTRICTED -iy8 - II Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 RESTRICTED ,,i, ; tat`' the methodology of such experiments must here be indicated. The overwhelming majority of the experiments are repeated six to eight times. In most experiments the plots are about 200 square meters. Almost all experimental data are processed by the method of Styu- dent, which allows us to rely mainly on the most reliable data and to reject all data open to any doubt. All the experimental institutes succeeded in attaining ex- ceptionally high accuracy in 1931 and 1932 ( 4-1 to S percent in most experiments), 1933 gave less reliable results, especially in the Ukraine, where irregular mortality and rotting of the bolls under the ex- ceptionally unfavorable conditions of that season gave a very?low experimental accuracy ( .+- 8 to 12 percent)', PREPARATION OF SEED FOR SOWING Anixternal peculiarity of the seed of the commercial va- rieties of cotton, as distinguished from the other crop plants of the New Areas, is the presence of fuzz. The presence of this fuzz, which cannot be removed by current mechanical methods of ginning and daunting sharply dis- tinguishes cottonseed from the seed of other field crops and requires a number of special cultural practices. Among the other peculiarities of cottonseed which strike the eye, its relatively low specific gravity should be mentioned. This makes it necessary to construct special drill seeders for cotton, having devices (agitators) to overcome the resistance caused by the cohesion of the downy seeds to the sowing apparatus. j' w1 .../, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 IIEST IUCTED The existing models of cotton seeders are not always suc- cessful in handling the sowing of dry downy seeds, but if the seed is moistened, causing mutual adhesion of the fibrils, of the fuzz, sowing performance of such seeders is satisfactory. When seeds are received from the plant, each kolkhoz should organize the sorting to eliminate immature, shrunken and diseased seed, and also the seed of different varieties mixed with the lot (the downless Kara-Chigit seed, the large seeds with white fuzz of Navrotskiy variety, etc). This work is entirely indispensable in growing the /r der No, 1300 variety, since this is the variety prescribed for sowings during the next few years on all fields in the New Areas, and loss of its purity must be avoided. THE J14PORTANCE OF SOAKING SEED Practice in the basic cotton areas of Central Asia and Transcaucasus regrads soaking of cottonseed in water before sow- ing as an obligatory cultural method, aimed at increasing ger- minating capacity under field conditions, together with gerrminat- ing force, and therefore also intended to accelerate germination and enhance productivity. Seed is not usually soaked in the un- irrigated cotton growing of the United States. With other field crops, soaking is practiced with seeds that sweli only slowly and require large amounts of water, such as sugarbeet. With market gardening of beans and other legumes that need relatively large amounts of water for seed swelling, pre- sowing soaking is, similarly, often considered obligatory, n ri I.JI~:t A~i Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ~.ST81C'lED Soaking gives the seeds the moisture they need for ger- mination in a shorter time than is possible in the field, and thus results in more rapid germination, Presowing soaking in- creased field germinating and germinating force. in experimats at the Turkestan Selection and Breeding Station (F. N. Mauer onie Lrphological and physiological properties cottonseed of and their ;ricultura.l 'ignif icance!' Cot brai, vol, 7. Moscow, 1927), with seeding depth of 5 centimeters and high ternperature: 29,9 degrees at the L centimeter depth, Germinating Capacity Germinative Power in Days in Percent by Arnold's Method Dry Seeds 68.8 6.t.. Moistened Seeds 72.0 S. In the New Cotton Areas, pre-sowing moistening of seed s sometimes proved superf2bus, and frequently even gave unfavorable 4 results. The results obtained at the Taman' Zonal Station in 1931 indicate the possibility of cases of harmful effects from soaking, The unfavorable effects of seedsoakin are expressed, when plantings are early, in retardation of germination, increase in mortality and in the last analysis am in reduction of yield. The number of days between planting and germination (25-L.1) is enough to justify the conclusion that when plantings are made in early April, conditions in the New Areas are unfavorablew:for germination. In the ensemble of factors necessary for rapid seed- ling emergence, the one which is most frequently absent in the New Areas is high temperature accompanied by ample spring water-- ing in fields tilled at the proper time. RESrRrcrEo - Zc / r Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 weep SO win a d g n rarif?cation `fa me of p 1a ti n n g I germ? nation , in percent SOAKED SEEDS Treen 3e o S O Wing and Rari facation in tsentner germination in r percent per h P etare Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 TRICTED If the seeds lie long in the earth, development ~ ent of fun- gus and bacterial diseases is encoura ed ' g in both seeds and seed- lings, and the depredations of. pests of every kind. are favored.. Swollen and soaked seeds cannot e , rminate before dry seeds if planted early, on account of insufficient soil temperatures At the same tale, even if the period between planting and germination is prolonged, the d r ~ y eels have sufficient tune to swell naturally in moist soil, Soaked seeds have softened integum ,, ents and are more read- ily attacked by pests and diseases than dry seeds which swell gradually from the soil moisture. The frequerstly observed heavy mortality among plants from early Plantings of moistened seeds is apparently due to this, Moistened seeds lose their germina- tive power during a long stay in soil in su.fflciently warmed through, resulting in the retardation of gerrnxnatlon observed in such seeds, 14atters are different when the weather at plant- ing is already hot,. Such weather usually comraences in the New ,Areas. at the. beginning of May. a'lost of the evidence from direct experiment is in favor of preliminary soaking of seed for relatively late.. planting in May, In practice one must always be ready to solve a problem in a different way, If weather or soil conditi ors are different. In any case, pre planting soaking cannot be indiscriminately condejned for the New Areas as it is among American farmers, The Socialist 1 production of cotton must take advantage of every opportunity to actively influence ture, whether its intervention affect the soil the adult plant, .or only the seed. If it becomes clear that under certain conditions 1tSTRICTEp Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ttSi tGTED soaking of seed is really a method of accelerating germination, then this method must be used. The following conclusions can be drawn from dozens of experiments carried out in 1930 and 1931 by sovkhozes, kolkhozes and scientific institutions in the New Areas, In early April planting dry seeds must be used, since. soil moisture is usually sufficient at this time for the natural swelling of the seeds, while soil temperature is still not high enough for rapid gerriiination. In May1planting with moderate soil moisture and stability of warm weather (over i -16 degrees) it is better to use soaked seeds. This cannot be done in dried out soil, since such soil quickly wrings the water out of moist seeds, There have been cases when such seeds have germinated, only to perish shortly after in the dry soil. These are of course only general indications, based on the usual "normal" 'spring weather, There may be cases in which it may be advantageous to use soaked seed at the end of April or, on the other hand, to dispense with soaking even at the be- ginning of May. The one to decide th question in each individual case should be the agronomist working in the undertaking. ing TECHNIQUE OF SEED SOAKING The experiment institutes of Central Asia recommend soak- cottonseed for two days or longer in running water or water changed daily. Experiments on the length of soaking, carried out in the New Areas .(Prikumsk Station and elsewhere) have es- tablished the possibility of limiting the period to a single day. dES TRICTED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 A Si aid ED Short soaking for 18-.2L,. -. hours makes it unnecessary to change the water. It is best to have the temperature'of the water no lower than 15-20 degrees, since swelling is faster in warm water, The question of the possibility of using sea water for soaking is of interest to for areas located near the sea or to bitter saline lirnan. This possibility has been established by experiments at the Taman' station in 1931 as well as at numerous sovkhozes and kolkhozes, The following results were obtained with May 10 plantings at Taman' DATE OF GERMINATION YIELD OF LINT IN . TSENTNER PER HECTARE Dry seed 26 May 18,2 Seed soaked in sea water 26 Nay 20.1 Seed soaked in fresh water 26 May 20,1 The weight of cottonseed is more than doubled after soak- ink; owing to the absorption of water by the swollen seeds, Thus the normal rate of planting, in terms of dry seed weight, is doubled for soaked seed. To avoid unnecessary transportation, the soaking of seed must in practice be done near the place of planting. Specially constructed tanks and pools and ponds are used for soaking. Cement silage pits or any convenient receptacle may be used such as vats, barrels, etc, It is sometimes done in sacks only half full of seed. The sacks must be immersed in water with the aid of a swinging arm or bob. In general it must be done in such a way that all of the seed is immersed. Even at high temperatures and in spite of a certain amount of air retained by the mass of downy seed, ,germination does not occur on imrnersion, But there d ES TAlC TED ~;v A Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 itt$T a1t ED are enough seeds floating on the surface of the water in con- tact with air to have sprouts appear soon. There is no ob- jection at all to planting seeds that have just started to sprout, but if the sprouts are more than 3-1i millimeters -long, their survival is doubtful In contrast to many other plants, the cotton plant reacts very unfavorably if its young rootlets are exposed to the air, not to mention breakage of the sprouts during planting by drill seeder. The time between termination of soaking and planting must be reduced to a minimum and should not in any event ex- ceed 2-Li. hours, Cases are possible in which some of the soaked seed may remain unplanted. In all such cases the seeds must be spread out to dry in a thin layer, The dried seeds may then be soaked again and planted. THE tv1PORTANCE OF DELINTING SEED FOR PLATING Some research workers in natural conditions in tropical countries are of the opinion that fiber and fuzz serve the bi- ological purpose of protecting the seeds from soiling, over- heating, suffocation, etc. F. 4. Mauer (Turkestan Plant Breed- ing Station) set up an experiment to confirm this opinion. It r~ consisted of the protracted soaking for 7 days of seeds of cotton of different varieties, with different amounts of fuzz. on the seeds. To create the worst conditions, the water used for soak- ing was not changed during the experiment. The results showed total loss of gexiiinating capacity by the bald or fuzzless seeds, while 2. percent of the almost fuzzless seeds germinated, the seeds with full fuzz covering still retained 30.E per- while cent of their germinating capacity. ii STRJCTEO Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ?S1 tCT ED Measures for slowing down the swelling of cotton seeds in the soil are not wanted; on the contrary, the task of cul- tural practice is to create all conditions for most rapid ger.- minatio . The less.the amount of protective integument remain- ing on the seeds, the higher will be the germinating capacity and the germinative power. This is applicable of course only to measured environments with conditions favorable to rapid ger- mination. Experiments at Tashkent show that removal of the seed cover results in the best and earliest germination. Delinting -- or reginning of seed for planting, which produces an additional raw material for industry, is at the same time a desirable cultural practice. It was feared that the seed would be dammed by the delinting saw teeth, or over- heated during the process; It was feared that.the placenta would be broken off,. and it was assumed that this would lead to rot- ting away of the seed in the ground. Parallel analyses of the condition of delinted and non-delinted seed showed the baseless- news assumption of delinting damage to be un.c~ounded. (. ion- tribution to the q:zestion of Delinting ottonseed for lanting. Periodical , No. land 2, Moscow, 1925.) Thus there were in all 0.3 percent more of damaged seeds among de- lintel material than among non-delinted seed. The `Turkestan Experimental Plant Breeding Station (F.M. Mauer) furnishes convincing evidence in favor of delinting. dSTRICTED, -'*"tr .. 99, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 itE$i RICI ED EXPERLIENT WITH DELINTING AT TURKESTAN PLANT :BREEDING STATION Dry Seeds Soaked Seeds Germination Germinative Germination Germinative Capacity, In percent power, In days Capacity, In percent power In days Undelinted seeds 81.5 5.9 85,S 5,6 Normally delinted seeds 89.5 5.3 83.5 L.8 Closely delinted seeds 82.0 5.5 87.0 L1.7 Even close delinting increases the percentage of seeds germinating and enhances the germinative power. Delinting of seed material should thus be considered a necessary procedure in preparation for planting in the New Cot- ton Areas. The agrotechnical 'significance of delinting should be especially great for the intermediate and late plantings at the end of April and the beginning of lay. Fuzz makes up about 12 percent of the weight of ginned seed on the average. The sa( delinters at the spinning mill remove about 2 percent of this, leaving about 10 percent un- touched. DELINTING COTTONSEED A considerable number of the many different forms of the cotton plant all over the world consist of varieties with- out fuzz, or only a small amount of it. Most of the commercial Egyptian varieties belong to this group. Numerous experiments have shown that hairless seed,su- perior to downy seed in field germination capacity and in ger-. minative power, dES Tfl TED Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 tIESI RICT Eli Mechanical delinting of cottonseed cannot completely remove the fuzz and make the seed entirely bare.: Special delinting machines mak e it possible to remove "up to 7-8 percent of seed weight iri the form of addita.0 na7, lint and linters, Since lql~ in America tinter s have been removed by use of the Ragodel machine, Since 1917, an demand of the far De- partment, the removal of linters has been compulsory, The best delinter -- the De Segundo defjrator -_ takes off 5-6 percent of the fuzz, If lint ers amounti t ngo only percent of seed weight had been taken off in 1931, the Union would have yielded 53,600 tons of pure cellulose (about 8o percent of la.nter' w~i~ht '~ The chemical methods of delint ? ~ ~.n,, being worked out on a Pilot-plant scale at the present time are of great interest to agronomic technolo Thus the fuzz was complete/ 't y ~urnedaway by treatment ' with concentrated sulphuric acid c This method was proposed as early as lgll by Mr, ll ? Y ~.ger (Alabama Agricultural Station > United States) ? of Cottonseed with concentrated Sul hur? p lc Ada, E~hl ~ ov D lv.' , No. 1., Moscow, 1929.) performed a large number of ex- periments With all possible varieties of cotton, and became con- vinced "that the treatment of Cottonseed with concentrated su1... phuric acid for 20-30 minutes followed by ,.washing. for 20 minutes in frequently changed water may be em ployed for delinting pur- poses without damage to the seed . ~xn consequence of which er- tItsrRrcrEn Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 V. G. Dlekmen (Professor Dr, V . Cr, Blekzrien, Treatment t Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 AES1AlC1E0 mination under field conditions. proceeds earlier and in a uniform manner), and also for sterilizing the surface of the seed. In our experiments there were cases in which seed re- in concentrated sulphuric acid (75.L percent) as long manned as 12 hours and sometimes up to 2 days, without perceptible reduction of the gerriination capacity 'of cotton variety No. 182. After delinting by Sulphuric acid careful and prolonged wash- ing of the seed is absolutely necessary, preferably under run- ning' water. Delinting may be accomplished by 20-30 minutes treatment with concentrated sulphuric acid of specific gravity 1,66 or higher. g ,,hor. About 20 kilograms of acid is required to delint 100 kilograms f very downy seed. The linters removed are turned ;o into glucose, which is then fermented to produce alcohol. r liters of alcohol may be distilled from the product of 100 kilograms of treated seed. An even more attractive suggestion (A. P. Zakoshchivov, ivanova and others. How to (tilize the y-products of ~l. T. the Lotton culture of.. Central Asia. Journal 2a khlokovuVu nezavis i,.most' , No. 6-7, ~IIashkerlt, 1931,) is to remove the linters from the seed by treating it with the. fumes of hydrochloric acid. In this case the linters are obtained in powder form as hydrocellulose, which in turn may be converted into cellu- lose acetate and used in manufacturing artificial silk. A ES TRIC TED r ?j4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 11 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 EXPEP 1I?ZENT Prikumsk r* (1 Khasav-Yurt 1 a ro+ Q) 'tj+ 'D~ ~D + w 14 The passible practical significance of delntin may ~ y be illustrated by the following results of field experiments at Prikumsk and Ithasav-Yurt in 1932. V. Stets' (Plantings of r,ottonseed hem' ?-ca11elinte Publications of ,SR , EDA7.NnchI, Tashkent, 1933. presents the following results of a delinting experiment with sulphuric acid, perfoi~ned in 1932,t the ~ AkItavak Station (Tashkent) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Ordinary seed 9~8 56 5,7 29 lnting; at Prjkumslc by treat- Delintered ment with strong sulphuric Deed 109 36 acid for 10 minutes; at Khasav- 93 50 yurt with hydrochloric acid of specific gravity 1,56 for 1)4 hours, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 aEST IUCT ED DAY'S BETI~EEN SOATING AND 50 percent GER- MZNATION DENSITY OF STAND IN THOUSANDS OF PLANTS PER RECTARE Delinated seed, soaked in water 93 Ordinary seed, soaked in water 7 58 Delinted seed, dry 5 Ol Ordinary seed, dry g ,g The earlier germination and greater field germination ca- pacity speak in favor of delinting. The experiments of the STAZRA of the SRE.DAZNIKhI on the Murgab sovkhozes (1931) and on the SOVKUOZ -rVakhsht' (1932) note sharp reduction in the incidence of gummosis in plants of Egyptian varieties grown from delinted seed, According to the observations of V. Stets, fuzzless seed after delinting possess the capacity of germinating at relatively low levels of soil moisture without preliminary soaking, which is explained by "the action of strong. sulphuric acid on the tough seed coat, making it more permeable and assuring closer contact between the surfaces of delinted seeds and the capillary part of the soil," The ability to obtain Luzzless seed opens up a series of vistas'before the agricultural technology of cotton growing. Earlier and uniform germination, of all seeds sown may be awaited, and consequently a certain increase in productivity as well; it will be possible to use ;rain drills for sowing cotton- seed, and these are technically .far more perfected than the sepc- ialized cotton seeders,` And finally, we may also await a reduction in the fungus and bacterial diseases carried over with the seed, YEg TRIg TED -R'~^.f +~.. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/16 : CIA-RDP82-00039R000100210002-6 ~~.5iHIC1ED 1;OH (i;1toNTI'zA.i,arON) I, '!(; ($ JJtID~ ,:i, hg :o 3 tbi.:L tty ().r ti .. ? ~f ' r 1~ a r~QWt1'4: c;l~vcc;Lot;)rrs rr;1 c),L r;r,r 1.+ i,i1,rrs,1 ;13i1, 3 1)y, tlror~c 1, t,;!6a1:",Tis ) f:: I,h 3 1 w ;t Ji r~ srt lM Chrni,c 1 eorPQ JX)dt 1~ Ls 1" fl arc 1,~c3,hnln~ln hr d 1Jrpr oti2J y 1,rC. th ~~ l h f !~,i* a? 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