Q
Qunying Luo
Researcher at University of Technology, Sydney
Publications - 46
Citations - 1738
Qunying Luo is an academic researcher from University of Technology, Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Water use. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 43 publications receiving 1434 citations. Previous affiliations of Qunying Luo include Department of Industry & University of Adelaide.
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Temperature thresholds and crop production: a review
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identified temperature thresholds for a range of crops from cereal crops to horticultural crops and to legum crops through an extensive literature review, and the effects of extreme temperatures on yield and yield components were then reviewed and summarised.
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Response of wheat growth, grain yield and water use to elevated CO2 under a Free‐Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) experiment and modelling in a semi‐arid environment
Garry O'Leary,Brendan Christy,J. G. Nuttall,Neil Huth,Davide Cammarano,Claudio O. Stöckle,Bruno Basso,Iurii Shcherbak,Glenn J. Fitzgerald,Qunying Luo,Immaculada Farre‐Codina,Jairo A. Palta,Jairo A. Palta,Senthold Asseng +13 more
TL;DR: The performance of six models in simulating crop responses to eCO 2 was similar and within or close to the experimental error for accumulated biomass, yield and water use response, despite some variations in early growth and LAI.
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Potential impact of climate change on wheat yield in South Australia
TL;DR: In this article, a wheat yield response surface has been constructed within 80 climate change scenarios and the most likely wheat yield changes have been defined under combinations of changes in regional rainfall, regional temperature and atmospheric CO2 concentration (CO2).
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Year patterns of climate impact on wheat yields
Qiang Yu,Longhui Li,Qunying Luo,Derek Eamus,Shouhua Xu,Chao Chen,Chao Chen,Enli Wang,Jiandong Liu,David C. Nielsen +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of meteorological conditions on wheat yields was derived from statistical yield data which were detrended by 9-year smoothing averages to remove the effects of technological improvements on wheat yield over time.
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Adaptation to climate change of wheat growing in South Australia: Analysis of management and breeding strategies
TL;DR: In this article, the APSIM-Wheat model was used to evaluate the effectiveness of three common management options such as early sowing, changing N application rate and use of different wheat cultivars derived in the model package in dealing with the projected negative impacts for Keith, South Australia.