1. Introduction
Guayule (
Parthenium argentatum, A. Gray) is a native perennial shrub in the desert of northcentral Mexico and southwestern Texas and can be exploited for its high-quality natural rubber [
1], hypoallergenic latex [
2], resin [
3,
4], and other valuable byproducts. According to Wang et al. [
5], rubber can be derived from different parts of the plant, with the plant stem comprising 55–65% of the dry biomass, while the remaining portion of the dry biomass is attributed to roots and branches. Methods to increase guayule production have been developed, including selective breeding [
6], appropriate rubber and latex extraction techniques [
7], procedures to generate valuable byproducts from non-rubber material [
8,
9], and improvement of physiological aspects to increase yield [
10].
Guayule is a xeric shrub with roots capable of extracting moisture from deep soil profiles. It withstands drought and dehydration by entering into a semi-dormant state [
11,
12]. Based on initial research conducted during World War II, the National Academy of Science [
13] reported that total water applications (TWA, irrigation plus precipitation) in excess of 640 mm yr
−1 could cause excessive vegetation growth and hinder rubber formation. Subsequent research has shown that substantial amounts of water are needed for crop establishment and that guayule production benefits from greater application amounts than reported by [
13]. Studies conducted in the Arizona desert have shown that between 470 and 635 mm of water are needed for crop establishment if using primarily surface irrigation [
11,
14]. Working with transplanted guayule, [
11,
15,
16] found that dry biomass, rubber, and resin yield were significantly reduced after two years of growth in a loam soil when TWA was less than ≈1400 mm yr
−1. In contrast, yield components were maximized when TWA was 1550 mm and 2300 mm during the first year and the second year of growth, respectively. Very similar water requirements (1600 and 2300 mm for the first and second year, respectively) were determined more recently on studies conducted with transplanted guayule on sandy clay loam soil [
14,
17] and direct seeded guayule on sandy loam and clay soils [
18]. Altogether, studies show a high linear correlation between water application and dry biomass and resin yield [
16,
17,
19,
20,
21,
22]. However, since shrub rubber content generally increased in water stressed treatments, rubber yield was less correlated with TWA [
17,
22]. Thus, water application must be optimized to achieve higher rubber and resin yields.
Irrigated crop water productivity (WP) is defined as the ratio of crop yield to the total water use [
23]. Currently available data show that WP for guayule rubber yield varies with irrigation method, TWA, total crop evapotranspiration (ET
c), and soil type [
14,
16,
17,
18,
20]. A 2.5-year study conducted on sandy clay loam soils [
14,
17] compared water productivity of rubber yield using five irrigation treatments, with total water application varying from 2080 to 4910 mm, and two irrigation methods, subsurface drip and level furrow. Water productivity was 25% greater at low water application and 94% greater at high water application with subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) than with level furrows. In contrast, water productivity was the same for the two irrigation methods when the crop was irrigated at 100% ET
c replacement but only for the tests conducted on a sandy loam soil. Productivity was significantly greater with furrow irrigation than with SDI on a predominately clay soil [
18]. Furthermore, in the sandy loam soil, RY–WP was not increased with less TWA compared to the 100% ET
c treatment, while it was significantly increased when TWA was less than that of the 100% ET
c treatment in the clay soil [
18]. This result was similar in a later study on the same clay soil that showed RY–WP was significantly greater when TWA was reduced by 33% compared to the fully irrigated treatment.
A limiting factor for guayule commercialization is the high cost of planting guayule seeds in greenhouses and transplanting seedlings to the field [
24,
25,
26,
27,
28]. In the early 2000s, the estimated cost to transplant one hectare of guayule was 1600 USD [
29], or about 2400 United States Dollars (USD) in present prices. The cost of guayule establishment can be reduced by using the direct-seeding method [
25]. Therefore, direct-seeded guayule combined with appropriate irrigation methods could be a potential alternative to transplanting seedling supplies from nurseries, as successfully demonstrated by Bridgestone Americas, Inc. in the southwest US [
5,
18]. Although direct seeding is possible, the process of conditioning guayule seeds and the choice of appropriate planting depths [
18,
30,
31], as well as the application of frequent light irrigations [
24,
31,
32] are critical for successful germination and growth establishment.
Ratooning, the practice of allowing guayule shrubs to regrow after an initial harvest, has been recommended for commercial guayule production [
27,
29]. Studies have shown that guayule rubber yield is the same or better with a ratooned crop than with a non-ratooned crop over the same time period [
13,
27]. Ratooning after an initial two-year growth period and harvest provides an earlier return on the crop establishment startup costs, as those costs are eliminated after the first year, as well as additional rubber yield. For direct-seeded guayule, initial investments include costs for land and seedbed preparation, precision planting operations, and, possibly, costs associated with installing a portable sprinkler irrigation system to provide the high-frequency soil wetting required to promote germination, prevent soil crusting, and facilitate crop emergence [
29]. Also, initial irrigation amounts needed to reestablish the growth of ratooned guayule are less than those needed for the reseeded field. Furthermore, pre-plant irrigation may be needed when reseeding to leach salts below the seedbed depth. Current recommendations for the optimal timing of the initial guayule harvest are after ≈two years of growth, and shrubs are typically cut at 0.10 m above the soil surface [
8,
27]. A literature review did not reveal data on yield response to irrigation and corresponding irrigation management strategies for ratooned guayule crops, whether by transplants or direct seeding.
The present paper is a follow-up analysis of the direct-seeded guayule irrigation studies initiated in Apr. 2018 at two locations in Arizona [
18]. Those guayule plots were harvested after approximately two years and allowed to regrow. Since the initial study revealed no yield and water productivity benefit for irrigation treatments beyond 75–100% ET
c, the follow-up study used the same treatment strategy as the original study but excluded the higher ET
c replacement rates. Thus, the objective of the present paper is to evaluate growth and yield responses to irrigation scheduling and total water applied for the ratooned direct-seeded guayule. The specific objectives are to (1) determine the optimal irrigation management rates for the sandy loam and clay soils, (2) assess the differences in ET
c, TWA, yield, and WP between the initial and ratooned crop, and (3) determine whether the initial and ratooned guayule crops should be managed differently.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Experimental Layout
The follow-up study with ratooned guayule was conducted starting in April 2020 and ended in February 2022. The experimental setup is similar to that of the initial direct-seeded study. Details about planting and crop establishment for the initial study are reported in [
18]. The experiments were conducted in fields at: (1) The University of Arizona, Maricopa Agricultural Center (MAC) farm, in Maricopa, Arizona (33.07° N lat; 111.97° W long; 361 m a.s.l.), and (2) Bridgestone Americas, Inc., Guayule Research Farm in Eloy, Arizona, USA (32.67° N lat; 111.63° W long; 482 m a.s.l.). Both fields included 18, 75 m long plots that were 6.1 m wide (six rows) at Maricopa and 8.1 m wide (eight rows) at Eloy. The soil at the Maricopa field belongs to a Casa Grande series [
33] that includes various sandy textures, with high to moderate water permeability and moderate water holding capacity. The Eloy field-site is mapped as a Gadsden series [
34], which has predominantly clay or silty clay loam, and relatively high water holding capacity but low permeability through the deep soil profile. Measured soil texture fractions and estimated soil water properties of the profiles at the two field sites are presented in [
18]. Following the harvest of the initial direct-seeded study, plants in those plots were harvested to ≈0.10 m above the soil surface in early April 2020 at Maricopa and early May in Eloy.
The split-plot design for the initial 2018–2020 experiments included location as the main plot and irrigation treatments as the split-plots [
18]. Within each location, the irrigation treatments were randomized in a complete block design, with three blocks and six irrigation treatments (
Figure 1). Five of the irrigation treatments, identified as D50, D75, D100, D125, and D150, were subsurface drip irrigated and received 50–150% of the calculated ET
c. The sixth treatment was furrow irrigated (F100) and received 100% ET
c replacement. A similar split-plot design was also adopted for the regrowth experiments (
Figure 1). As previously noted, in the initial study the higher ET
c replacement treatments produced significantly lower rubber yield and productivity. Hence, the higher replacement treatments were not included in the regrowth evaluation, but the plots were maintained with irrigation to provide adjacent canopy cover for the experimental treatment plots. Thus, treatments reported herein at Maricopa included three SDI treatments (D50, D75, and D100) that received three respective levels of irrigation (50, 75, and 100% replacement of ET
c) and one furrow irrigated treatment (F100) at 100% ET
c. The same treatments were established at Eloy with the exception of D100, which not only had poor regrowth but also had significantly lower water productivity in the harvest of the initial crop than the D50 and D75 treatments in the heavy clay soil. Guayule plants in the D100 treatment (as well as D125 and D150) in the initial study were overgrown with high biomass yield, which likely reduced regeneration rate and resulted in lower ratooned stand. The initial direct-seeded and regrowth experimental layouts are both shown in
Figure 1. The guayule was grown from USDA germplasm line AZ-2 seeds (PI 599675) [
35], planted in rows spaced 1.02 m apart using a precision vacuum planter, as described by [
18]. Irrigation was applied to all treatment plots to activate plant growth, starting on 16 April 2020 at Maricopa and 8 May 2020 at Eloy. The studies ended at both locations in mid-February 2022, when plots were harvested, as described later in
Section 2.5.
2.2. Meteorological Data
Meteorological data for the study years were collected from the Arizona Meteorological Network (AZMET;
https://cals.arizona.edu/AZMET/index.html [accessed on 16 April 2020]). The MAC AZMET station is located 200 m from the Maricopa field site, while for Eloy the closest station is Coolidge, Arizona (32.98° N lat; 111.61° W long; 423 m a.s.l.), located about 30 km north of the site. Elshikha et al. [
22] presented mean daily historical data (2003 to 2021) recorded at the Coolidge AZMET, including maximum and minimum air temperatures (Ta max and Ta min, respectively), minimum relative humidity (RHmin), precipitation, windspeed at 2 m height (u2), and the standardized Penman–Monteith grass-reference evapotranspiration (ET
o) [
36]. The daily Ta max and Ta min (
Figure 2a), RHmin and precipitation (
Figure 2b), and u2 and ET
o (
Figure 2c) are shown for the ratooned studies at Maricopa (15 April 2020 through 15 February 2022) and at Eloy (1 May 2020 through 15 February 2022) in
Figure 3a–c, respectively. The 2020 summer (21 June 21 to 20 September) following ratooning was extremely hot and dry, where daily Ta max averaged 42.0 °C at Maricopa and 41.0 °C at the higher elevation in Coolidge/Eloy. During that period, Ta max was above 43.3 °C on 38 and 20 days and the RHmin averaged 12.9 and 13.0%, respectively, at Maricopa and Eloy. In contrast, the summer of 2021 was somewhat cooler and much wetter. In that summer, daily Ta max averaged 39.2 °C at Maricopa and 38.1 °C at Eloy, where Ta max above 43.3 °C only occurred on only 15 and 3 days, respectively. While recorded precipitation was 3.6 and 25.9 mm at Maricopa and Eloy, respectively, in summer 2020, it was 216 and 153 mm at the locations in summer 2021, respectively. Historical AZMET data for summer at the Maricopa and Coolidge/Eloy stations indicate that Ta max averages about 39.6 and 39.1 °C, respectively [
22,
37], while summer precipitation totals on average 59 and 57 mm, respectively. Thus, the primary growth-producing periods for the ratooned guayule were hotter and drier than normal during the first summer and slightly cooler but much wetter than normal during the second summer. The cumulative precipitation and cumulative ET
o for the regrown guayule crops were 297 and 3661 mm at Maricopa, respectively, and 268 and 3348 mm at Eloy, respectively.
2.3. Irrigation Scheduling and Crop Evapotranspiration
Irrigation scheduling for the regrowth treatments was based on ET
c replacement and targeted soil water depletion (SWD) within the guayule root zone (Z
r). The procedures described in [
18] (
Section 2.5) for computing a soil water balance (SWB) based on soil water content and irrigation/precipitation measurements were used. For the regrowth study, Z
r was assumed as 2.0 m from the start to the end of the regrowth period. The soil water parameters used in computing the SWB for the regrowth treatments were those previously measured at the two locations by [
18], where field capacity (FC) and permanent wilting point (PWP) volumetric soil water contents were 27.1 and 14.4% at Maricopa, respectively, and 39.6 and 24.2% at Eloy, respectively. The total available water (TAW) of the guayule root zone was computed as:
where:
TAW is in mm, Zr is 2.0 m, and FC and PWP were the water content values (% basis) for the two sites, shown above.
At the two locations, a neutron moisture meter (NMM) was used to measure the volumetric soil water content. Readings were obtained from 0.15 m to 1.95 m below the soil surface in 0.30 m increments in each treatment replicate [
18]. Soil water content was measured approximately at 1–2-week intervals during spring through fall, and about every 3 weeks during the crop’s winter dormancy period when irrigation was not applied. Soil water was last measured on 31 January 2022, at both locations, about two weeks prior to plant harvest sampling. To compute the guayule crop ET by the SWB, the incremental water content depth readings on each date were averaged over Z
r and then converted to depletion (D
r) in units of mm:
where:
Dr is in mm, Zr is 2.0 m, and FC and average soil water content values are on a % basis. Thus, Dr is equal to zero when soil water content is at FC and is equal to TAW when soil water content is at PWP.
For all treatments, the ET
c was calculated for periods measured at two adjacent NMM dates by the SWB (Equation (3)):
where:
ETc is the total ET (mm) that occurred in the period from the first (1) to second (2) measurement date, Dr,1 and Dr,2 are the average treatment measured depletion (mm) on the first and second date, respectively, I (mm) is average total treatment irrigation, P (mm) is the total precipitation (excluding days when P < 1.5 mm), and DP is the deep percolation during the period. For all treatments, DP in Equation (3) was assumed as zero because measured Dr never exceeded FC on any measurement date.
The irrigation treatments pursued different soil water depletion targets depending on site and water application method, which were based on measured SWD expressed in terms of TAW:
where:
SWD is in percent, TAW is in mm, and Dr (mm) is measured depletion in mm.
At Maricopa, the allowable SWD for the D100 subsurface irrigation treatment was limited to 35% of TAW and each irrigation replaced 100% of the calculated ETc. The D50 and D75 treatment irrigations replaced, respectively, 50 and 75% of the D100 ETc. The furrow treatment (F100) at Maricopa limited depletion to 55% of the TAW and replaced 100% ETc with irrigation. At Eloy, both the D75 and F100 irrigation treatments targeted a 55% allowable SWD and irrigations replaced 75% and 100% of ETc for the two treatments, respectively. Irrigation applied to the D50 at Eloy was 67% of that applied to the D75. The irrigation treatments were applied in both years during the period April–November and no irrigation was applied during the winter and early spring months, when guayule plants were semi-dormant.
At Maricopa, the three SDI and furrow treatments received differential irrigation applications starting on 16 April 2020. However, at Eloy, the two SDI treatments received equal irrigation from May 8 through 31 May 2020, which was applied to the plots by three furrow irrigations. Furrow irrigation was used because the SDI system was not operable at that time. Differential irrigation applications for the D75 and D50 at Eloy, thereafter, commenced using SDI on 17 June 2020. Irrigation applied to the F100 treatment at Eloy was applied according to the F100 SWB.
2.4. Irrigation System and Fertilization
The SDI and level furrow irrigation systems were designed and set up at both experimental sites in 2018 [
18]. The SDI drip tape was buried 0.20 m below the soil surface in the center of each bed. At Maricopa, a 51 mm diameter main line buried 0.75 m below the surface supplied water to all SDI treatment replicates. At Eloy, each treatment replicate had a separate station and main line. Each irrigation station was equipped with a solenoid valve, a flow meter, a pressure regulator and gauge, and an air vent. Water was delivered to each level furrow plot with a riser valve, with the applied volume measured with an in-line flow meter. An end-berm prevented any runoff from these plots.
Fertilizer was applied each year in the form of urea–ammonium–nitrate (32% N) at a rate of 65 kg N ha−1. The fertilizer was injected in the irrigation water using a single head hydraulic diaphragm chemigation injection pump. The pump was connected, through injection ports, to the mainline of the SDI system and to an aluminum pipe delivering the water to the furrow plots. All treatment plots were fertigated in mid-September 2020 and early July 2021 at both locations.
2.5. Plant Growth Measurements and Yield Assessment
Crop measurements included crop height, canopy cover, and final biomass. Crop height and crop width needed to determine canopy cover were sampled about once per month using three 1.0 m
2 sections selected along the inner four crop rows within each experimental plot. The canopy cover fraction (f
c) was estimated from measured canopy width using the formula presented in [
18]. Plant biomass was sampled in mid-February 2022 by hand-harvesting the plants from the ground level, from three, 3.0 m
2 sections within the inner rows of each plot. Thus, the ratooned guayule was allowed to regrow for 22 and 21 months at Maricopa and Eloy, respectively. The moisture content of the harvested biomass was measured by air-drying, grinding, and oven-drying the plant samples [
8,
19]. After complete drying, the rubber (R) and resin (Re) contents were determined using a Soxhlet-based near-infrared spectroscopy (NIR) method [
10,
18]. Rubber and resin yield were determined from the biomass yield and rubber and resin content. The water productivity for DB, RY, and ReY were then calculated using Equation (5):
where total water applied (TWA) is the sum of irrigation and precipitation received by the plants during the two years of regrowth.
2.6. Statistical Analysis
The statistical procedures described by [
18] were adopted for the present analysis. A split-plot model was used, considering the experiment locations as main plot treatment with 2 levels, and irrigation as the split-plot treatment with 3 (Eloy) and 4 (Maricopa) levels. Using values from the replicated samples, statistical analyses of R, Re, DB, RY, ReY, as well as the WP for DB (DB–WP), RY (RY–WP), and ReY (WP–ReY), were performed with the Proc Mixed procedure (SAS v.9.4, Institute Inc., 2016, Cary, NC, USA). Both location and irrigation treatments, as well as their interaction, were considered as fixed effects, while block and block x location were random effects. Proc Mixed estimated the random components and the residual by the residual maximum likelihood (REML). When location, treatment, or interaction F tests were significant (
p < 0.05), least square means were separated using the
P diff option in SAS (with
p < 0.05).
4. Discussion
The irrigation water applied to activate growth for the ratooned crops in the spring of 2020 at Maricopa and Eloy, ≈330 and 420 mm, respectively, was about 50 and 33% less than that applied to germinate and establish the direct-seeded guayule crops in spring 2018 in the initial studies [
18]. Bucks et al. [
25], using sprinkler irrigation, recorded as much as 560 mm of irrigation to establish a direct-seeded guayule crop during spring. Moreover, all other reported direct-seeded guayule studies used sprinkler irrigation to germinate and establish the crops (e.g., [
30,
31]). Our results indicate that a ratooned guayule crop will need significantly less irrigation water to promote regrowth than that needed to establish the direct-seeded crop.
In addition, the costs associated with installing a sprinkler system for the initial establishment would be eliminated since the existing (drip or furrow) irrigation method would be adequate for regrowth. In the pre-ratooned, direct-seeded studies (2018–2020), the D100 and F100 at Maricopa received irrigation totals of 3682 and 3506 mm, respectively, and 436 mm of precipitation [
18]. The TWA was 17 and 22% less for the D100 and F100 treatments, respectively, in the regrowth study at Maricopa. The TWA for the F100 treatment in the regrowth study at Eloy was 27% less, or 970 mm, than for the F100 in pre-ratooned study. Besides the lower irrigation requirements needed for regrowth establishment versus direct-seeded establishment, comparatively less irrigation was needed in the second year of the regrowth study because of the higher precipitation in summer 2021 versus summer 2019. Nevertheless, considering the ≈1-month shorter season and less TWA for the regrowth study at Maricopa, the cumulative ET
c was similar to the cumulative ET
c in the pre-ratooned studies at the location. For the D100 and F100 treatments at Maricopa, cumulative ET
c was only 6% and 10% less than that in the pre-ratooned studies, respectively. The regrowth study at Eloy was about 2 months shorter than the pre-ratooned study at that location. For regrowth at Eloy, cumulative ET
c for the D75 treatment was about the same as in the pre-ratooned study for that treatment, whereas the cumulative ET
c for the F100 treatment was about 20% lower, corresponding to 27% less TWA.
Final DB, RY, and ReY were higher for the ratooned than pre-ratooned guayule [
18] for corresponding treatments at Maricopa, where the treatments averaged 25% more DB, 33% more RY, and 32% more ReY. At Maricopa, the highest increases in the three yield parameters for the ratooned guayule were obtained for D50 and D75 treatments, though all treatments had positive increases. As expected, the WP for the ratooned treatments were greatly improved at Maricopa, where the increase in WP for corresponding treatments over pre-ratooned treatments averaged 36, 43, and 43% for DB–WP, RY–WP, and ReY-WP, respectively. In addition to the pre-ratooned study, the WP (based on TWA) for the Maricopa ratooned guayule (provided in
Table 3) were notably higher than those in other studies, e.g., [
17,
22]. The highest WP in literature was reported by [
14] for transplanted guayule using SDI.
The final DB for the D50 and F100 treatments for the ratooned guayule at Eloy averaged 13 and 41% less than that for the pre-ratooned D50 and F100 treatments, respectively, while DB for the ratooned D75 treatment was 3% higher than the pre-ratooned D75. However, the DB–WP for the D50 and F100 treatments at Eloy was about the same for the ratooned and pre-ratooned studies, as TWA was also lower for those treatments in the ratooned studies. On the other hand, the RY of the F100, D50, and D75 Eloy treatments in the ratooned study at Eloy exceeded the RY of those in the pre-ratooned study by 3, 9, and 26%, respectively, while RY–WP for the ratooned were increased 24, 12, and 25%, respectively. The ReY-WP for the ratooned studies also were increased: 18, 4, and 12% for the F100, D50, and D75 treatments, respectively.
The ratooned guayule regrowth showed expected differences in crop height and canopy cover as differences in cumulative irrigation increased for treatments. Differential irrigation treatments started later at Eloy than Maricopa where differences in the growth parameters were unclear until late summer 2020 versus October 2020 at Eloy. While the regrowth of the treatments at Eloy lagged treatments at Maricopa in 2020, crop height and cover measurements indicated the parameters were similar at the two locations by about mid-November 2020. However, at either location, the ratooned regrowth developed more rapidly during the first year than did growth following direct seeding in the pre-ratooned studies at the locations [
18]. A benchmark canopy cover of 90% was reached by the D100 at Maricopa and the F100 treatment at Eloy about 1.5–2.0 months earlier than for those treatments in the pre-ratooned studies at the locations. Similarly, well-watered treatments in a separate direct-seeded guayule study planted in April 2018 at Eloy also reached 90% cover about 2.0 months later than that in the regrowth at Eloy [
22]. The more rapid regrowth for the F100 treatment at Eloy occurred with about 17% less irrigation from Spring-Fall in the first year than that applied to the direct-seeded crop. A higher rate of crop height regrowth during the first year for the ratooned crops compared to the pre-ratooned crops at the Eloy location is also noted. The quicker regrowth of ratooned compared to pre-ratooned guayule may be due to the fact that the ratooned plants already have strong, established roots from its previous growth. This gives it a head start in growing taller during the first year after regrowth, while pre-ratooned guayule has to develop its roots, slowing down its initial growth. The final measured crop heights in November 2021 for the ratooned crops were about 0.90 m at Maricopa and 1.0 m at Eloy excluding the D50 treatments, which were lower. Comparable final crop heights were attained for the well-watered treatments in directed-seeded studies after two years [
18,
22].
Final guayule DB is typically a linear function of TWA or cumulative ET
c [
14,
22,
24] as in the present ratooned guayule studies. For this study, the slope of the linear regression of DB vs. TWA was 0.0123 Mg ha
−1/TWA, which suggests about 5.0 Mg ha
−1 of DB gained for every 400 mm of TWA. The slope is consistent with the relationship of DB vs. TWA (0.015), where only SDI treatments were used [
14]. In studies in which only furrow irrigation was used, the regression slope of DB vs. TWA was found to be much flatter, i.e., 0.05–0.075 [
16,
17,
22]. Thus, guayule DB response to increasing TWA appears to be much lower in furrow irrigation than SDI. The differences in low versus high frequency irrigation between furrow and SDI change the way soil water fluctuates for guayule during the season. The RY and ReY were not as well correlated to TWA or cumulative ET
c as DB because the R and Re were significantly lower for the wettest irrigation treatments at the locations, which also had the highest DB.
Prior studies using furrow irrigation have indicated that guayule biomass at harvest may not differ among treatments when the average SWD throughout the season is maintained at less than 70% [
11,
15,
16,
17,
22]. However, this generality is not appropriate when SDI is used because SWD for guayule can be maintained at much lower levels during the growing season than that for furrow irrigation as shown by [
17,
18]. This was confirmed in the present regrowth studies on the sandy loam soil at Maricopa, in which DB for SDI treatments decreased significantly as average SWD increased from 31% for the D100 to 54 and 78% for the D75 and D50 treatments, respectively. The F100 at Maricopa had an average SWD similar to the D75 and produced the same DB as the D75. However, on the higher soil water retention soil at Eloy, the pre-ratooned SDI study reported that DB was not significantly different between D75 and a D100 treatment, where average SWD was 47 and 26%, respectively. The 47% SWD at Eloy for D75 represents significantly higher TAW than that for the D75 at Maricopa. Consequently, for the present ratooned study a D100 treatment at Eloy was omitted and the D75 treatment, maintained at less than 55% SWD, was deemed the optimum SDI treatment. At Eloy, the DB for the D50 treatment with an average SWD of 74% was significantly lower than that for the D75 in the ratooned study. While average seasonal SWD was about the same for the D75 and F100 treatments at Eloy, SWD was much higher for the F100 than D75 for extended periods in late fall 2020 and spring 2021. This likely reduced the production of biomass for the F100 treatment during these periods, which was suggested by the lower gain in crop height compared to the D75.
The effects of prolonged water stress due to limited irrigation and higher SWD often produce higher rubber content compared to treatments under wetter soil moisture conditions [
17,
22,
27]. This was found to be the case in the ratooned studies at Eloy, where R was significantly greater for the D50 treatment. Differently, R was the same for all treatments except the D100 at Maricopa. For alike treatments, the R was the same for D50 at both locations but higher for D75 and F100 at Maricopa. These results do agree with treatment differences for R at the two locations in the pre-ratooned study [
18] and may suggest an effect on R due to the different soil types. It is also worth noting that the R was higher about 0.6% higher in the ratooned than pre-ratooned for alike treatments at both locations. Previous studies have shown unclear trends for differences in Re due to irrigation or stress [
18]. In the present studies, irrigation treatment trends were essentially the same as those for R at each location, where Re was the same for all treatments at Maricopa except for the D100, which was lower, and the same for the D50 and F100 treatments at Eloy and lower for the D75. As for R, the Re for alike treatments was also significantly greater at Maricopa than at Eloy. Also, as for R, the Re was greater for the ratooned than pre-ratooned treatments at both locations. The increase in ratooned Re averaged 1.1% at Maricopa and 1.4% at Eloy.