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Journal ArticleDOI

Drought resistance, water-use efficiency, and yield potential-are they compatible, dissonant, or mutually exclusive?

Abraham Blum
- 20 Dec 2005 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 11, pp 1159-1168
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TLDR
It is concluded that the effect of a single 'drought adaptive' gene on crop performance in water-limited environments can be assessed only when the whole system is considered in terms of YP, DR, and WUE.
Abstract
This presentation is a concept review paper dealing with a central dilemma in understanding, designing, and acting upon crop plant improvement programs for drought conditions. The association among yield potential (YP), drought resistance (DR), and water-use efficiency (WUE) is often misunderstood, which in turn can lead to conceptual oversight and wrong decisions in implementing breeding programs for drought-prone environments. Although high YP is the target of most crop breeding programs, it might not be compatible with superior DR. On the other hand, high YP can contribute to yield in moderate stress environments. Plant production in water-limited environments is very often affected by constitutive plant traits that allow maintenance of a high plant water status (dehydration avoidance). Osmotic adjustment (OA) is a major cellular stress adaptive response in certain crop plants that enhances dehydration avoidance and supports yield under stress. Despite past voiced speculations, there is no proof that OA entails a cost in terms of reduced YP. WUE for yield is often equated in a simplistic manner with DR. The large accumulation of knowledge on crop WUE as derived from research on carbon isotope discrimination allows some conclusions on the relations between WUE on the one hand, and DR and YP on the other, to be made. Briefly, apparent genotypic variations in WUE are normally expressed mainly due to variations in water use (WU; the denominator). Reduced WU, which is reflected in higher WUE, is generally achieved by plant traits and environmental responses that reduce YP. Improved WUE on the basis of reduced WU is expressed in improved yield under water-limited conditions only when there is need to balance crop water use against a limited and known soil moisture reserve. However, under most dryland situations where crops depend on unpredictable seasonal rainfall, the maximisation of soil moisture use is a crucial component of drought resistance (avoidance), which is generally expressed in lower WUE. It is concluded that the effect of a single 'drought adaptive' gene on crop performance in water-limited environments can be assessed only when the whole system is considered in terms of YP, DR, and WUE.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of drought and heat stress on reproductive processes in cereals.

TL;DR: The results achieved so far indicate that various plant organs, in a definite hierarchy and in interaction with each other, are involved in determining crop yield under stress.

Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation

TL;DR: The abstract should follow the structure of the article (relevance, degree of exploration of the problem, the goal, the main results, conclusion) and characterize the theoretical and practical significance of the study results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effective use of water (EUW) and not water-use efficiency (WUE) is the target of crop yield improvement under drought stress

Abraham Blum
- 26 Jun 2009 - 
TL;DR: It is concluded that EUW is a major target for yield improvement in water-limited environments and an inverse acronym of WUE because very often high WUE is achieved at the expense of reduced EUW.
Journal ArticleDOI

General mechanisms of drought response and their application in drought resistance improvement in plants

TL;DR: With increasing knowledge to comprehensively decipher the complicated mechanisms of drought resistance in model plants, it still remains an enormous challenge to develop water-saving and drought-resistant crops to cope with the water shortage and increasing demand for food production in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breeding for Yield Potential and Stress Adaptation in Cereals

TL;DR: The physiological basis of crop yield and its response to stresses is highlighted, with special emphasis on drought, and ways to improve the efficiency of crop breeding through a better physiological understanding by both conventional and molecular methods are discussed.
References
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Book

Responses of plants to environmental stresses

J. Levitt
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the responses of plants to environmental stresses and found that plants respond to environmental stress in response to various types of stressors, such as drought and flooding.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Plants Cope with Water Stress in the Field? Photosynthesis and Growth

TL;DR: Differences among species that can be traced to different capacities for water acquisition, rather than to differences in metabolism at a given water status, are described.
Book

Plant Breeding For Stress Environments

Abraham Blum
TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed discussion of the physiological approach to breeding for resistance to specific stresses is presented, but not all environmental stresses are covered, omitting those for which little can be said today on practical solutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Five ways to stay green.

TL;DR: The relationship between carbon income and expenditure over the life of a leaf is described and related to the productivity benefits of altering the timing of senescence initiation, and the question of the limits on stay-green as a productivity-enhancing character is addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hormonal Changes in the Grains of Rice Subjected to Water Stress during Grain Filling

TL;DR: Results suggest that an altered hormonal balance in rice grains by water stress during grain filling, especially a decrease in GAs and an increase in ABA, enhances the remobilization of prestored carbon to the grains and accelerates the grain filling rate.
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