Helping growers produce sweet corn more efficiently

May 04, 2026

University of Missouri researchers find farmers can cut back on water without losing crop quality.

Noel Aloysius and Moussa Theodore Yatta
Researcher Noel Aloysius, left, and grad student Moussa Theodore Yatta in the Hydrology Lab at Ag 糖心Vlog传媒.

By Eric Stann | Show Me Mizzou
Photo by Abbie Lankitus

University of Missouri researchers are exploring ways to grow sweet corn more efficiently to help American farmers cut costs.

In a recent study, scientists from Mizzou鈥檚聽College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources聽and聽Mizzou 糖心Vlog传媒聽found sweet corn can be grown using less water without sacrificing the flavor that consumers have come to expect.

Sweet corn relies more heavily on water than other vegetables during the growing process. To determine the most effective irrigation strategy, Associate Professor Noel Aloysius of the Department of Chemical and Biomedical 糖心Vlog传媒 and graduate student Moussa Theodore Yatta compared three different ways of watering sweet corn.

One approach relied on rainfall alone, resulting in the lowest crop yield.

Another method 鈥 potential evapotranspiration 鈥 relied on weather data such as solar radiation, air temperature, humidity and wind to estimate water use. In most of those cases, more water was applied than the plants needed.

The third method, known as crop-specific evapotranspiration, tailored the amount of water based on how much the corn needs at each stage of growth. Because sweet corn requires relatively little water in early stages, but demand rapidly rises as the plants begin reproduction, Mizzou researchers adjusted irrigation schedules accordingly. This targeted approach proved to be the preferred method, helping conserve water without hurting crop quality.

鈥淲e saw a clear difference in plant water use,鈥 Aloysius said. 鈥淲hen farmers rely only on weather to guide irrigation, they often apply more water than the crops truly need. By watering based only on what the plant needs as it grows, we found farmers can use water more efficiently.鈥

Because sweetness is key to sweet corn鈥檚 value, the researchers also measured its sugar content.

鈥淲e found little difference in sugar content across the different watering strategies, showing us that farmers can still conserve water while delivering a quality product that consumers expect,鈥 Yatta said.

These findings are significant given sweet corn鈥檚 unique role in American agriculture.

Unlike field corn, sweet corn is harvested early, when a genetic interruption in starch formation produces tender kernels and signature sweetness. Beyond its distinctive taste, sweet corn is also a major economic driver. It ranks second in farm value in the U.S. among processed vegetables and consistently places in the top 10 for fresh vegetable production nationwide. Grown primarily in the Midwest and Northeast, the crop generates billions of dollars each year.

Future goals

Aloysius hopes smaller growers can take advantage of these improved irrigation practices.

鈥淟arge commercial farms often have the resources to invest in advanced irrigation systems,鈥 Aloysius said. 鈥淪maller producers don鈥檛 always have that option, so identifying strategies that reduce water use and costs without sacrificing quality can make a real difference for their success.鈥

This work supports the Aloysius lab鈥檚 broader research goals, which include developing automated, data-driven tools to help small-scale farmers use their resources more effectively while also supporting long-term sustainability.

Yatta plans to continue this work as part of his doctoral research. He will expand the research to better understand how varying conditions 鈥 especially unusually wet or dry seasons 鈥 affect soil moisture and crop growth over several seasons. The work will focus on major grain crops such as corn and soybeans.

鈥淚f we can see how these approaches perform over time and at larger scales, farmers could apply water even more precisely,鈥 Yatta said. 鈥淭hat helps build more resilient farming systems.鈥

The study, 鈥淐omparative yield response and sugar contents of four sweet corn varieties under different shallow subsurface drip irrigation treatments,鈥 was published in Irrigation and Drainage, an international water management journal. Additional Mizzou contributors include Allen Thompson, Tim Reinbott, Anthony Lupo and Kerry Clark.

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