N
Nobuya Kobayashi
Researcher at National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
Publications - 64
Citations - 5302
Nobuya Kobayashi is an academic researcher from National Agriculture and Food Research Organization. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oryza sativa & Quantitative trait locus. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 58 publications receiving 4302 citations. Previous affiliations of Nobuya Kobayashi include International Rice Research Institute.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Plant drought stress: effects, mechanisms and management
Muhammad Farooq,Muhammad Farooq,Abdul Wahid,Nobuya Kobayashi,Daisuke Fujita,Shahzad M. A. Basra +5 more
TL;DR: The effects of drought stress on the growth, phenology, water and nutrient relations, photosynthesis, assimilate partitioning, and respiration in plants, and the mechanism of drought resistance in plants on a morphological, physiological and molecular basis are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI
NAL1 allele from a rice landrace greatly increases yield in modern indica cultivars.
Daisuke Fujita,Kurniawan Rudi Trijatmiko,Analiza G. Tagle,Maria Veronica Sapasap,Yohei Koide,Kazuhiro Sasaki,Nikolaos Tsakirpaloglou,Ritchel B. Gannaban,Takeshi Nishimura,Seiji Yanagihara,Yoshimichi Fukuta,Tomokazu Koshiba,Inez H. Slamet-Loedin,Tsutomu Ishimaru,Nobuya Kobayashi,Nobuya Kobayashi +15 more
TL;DR: A gene, SPIKELET NUMBER (SPIKE), from a tropical japonica rice landrace that enhances the grain productivity of indica cultivars through pleiotropic effects on plant architecture is identified and could contribute to food security in indica-growing regions such as South and Southeast Asia.
Book ChapterDOI
Strategies for producing more rice with less water.
TL;DR: This chapter has been retracted as this was plagiarized and the author should have known better.
Journal ArticleDOI
Broader leaves result in better performance of indica rice under drought stress
TL;DR: A negative correlation was observed between stomatal conductance and the FTSW threshold at which normalized transpiration started to decline during soil drying, and overall, the IR64-derived lines with broader leaves performed better than NILs with narrow and short leaves under drought.
Journal ArticleDOI
qEMF3, a novel QTL for the early-morning flowering trait from wild rice, Oryza officinalis, to mitigate heat stress damage at flowering in rice, O. sativa
Hideyuki Hirabayashi,Kazuhiro Sasaki,Takashi Kambe,Ritchel B. Gannaban,Monaliza A. Miras,Merlyn S. Mendioro,Eliza Vie Simon,Patrick Lumanglas,Daisuke Fujita,Yoko Takemoto-Kuno,Yoshinobu Takeuchi,Ryota Kaji,Motohiko Kondo,Nobuya Kobayashi,Tsugufumi Ogawa,Ikuo Ando,Krishna S.V. Jagadish,Tsutomu Ishimaru +17 more
TL;DR: The early-morning flowering (EMF) trait mitigates heat-induced spikelet sterility at the flowering stage by escaping heat stress during the daytime as mentioned in this paper, which is one of the biggest concerns resulting from future climate change.