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Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of phenology on grain yield variation among barley cultivars grown under terminal drought

Jaquie Mitchell, +2 more
- 01 Jan 1996 - 
- Vol. 47, Iss: 5, pp 757-774
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TLDR
There is scope to develop barley cultivars of later phenology than is currently available to provide Queensland farmers with the option of utilising early rainfall events which are sometimes the only planting opportunity.
Abstract
We investigated the influence of sowing time and genotypic variation for phenology on grain yield of barley in south-eastern Queensland. Over 3 seasons, 8 trials with 10 cultivars and 1 trial with 4 cultivars were conducted under either irrigated or terminal drought conditions at 2 locations. Rainout shelters ensured the development of severe terminal water stress. Trials were either sown on a common date, as conducted in traditional multi-environment trials, or over 3 weeks to synchronise anthesis among cultivars of different phenologies. Within the common sowing date trials, variation (P < 0.01) existed among cultivars for grain yield. From the 6 common sowing trials there was a negative correlation (P < 0.05) between grain yield and days to anthesis; that is, the shorter duration cultivars expressed the highest grain yield. Variation in days to anthesis accounted for 48-72% of the variation for grain yield. In the staggered sowing trials, where anthesis of all cultivars occurred within 4 or 2 days of the mean anthesis date, variation for grain yield was small or non-significant, and there was no association between grain yield and days to anthesis. The staggered sowing experiment with 10 cultivars indicated that duration of the vegetative phase was important in determining total dry matter production at maturity when cultivars were grown under terminal drought. Long-duration cultivars sown earlier had greater total dry matter at maturity than short-duration cultivars. This was associated with a greater water extraction by the long-duration cultivars, especially at depth, which remained inaccessible to later sown, short-duration cultivars. However, due to the low harvest index of the long-duration cultivars, grain yield of long- and short-duration cultivars was comparable when anthesis of cultivars was synchronised. When sown at the same time, a short-duration cultivar is advantageous because of a high chance of escaping water stress that develops during the critical development stage of anthesis. The results from the staggered sowing date experiments, however, indicated that the long-duration cultivars, when sown earlier in the season, had no yield disadvantage in comparison with the short-duration cultivars sown later in the season. Therefore, there is scope to develop barley cultivars of later phenology than is currently available to provide Queensland farmers with the option of utilising early rainfall events which are sometimes the only planting opportunity.

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Citations
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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

Coping with drought: stress and adaptive responses in potato and perspectives for improvement.

TL;DR: An overview of past research activity on drought tolerance in potato is presented, highlighting recent advances with examples from other crops and suggesting future research directions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modelled wheat phenology captures rising temperature trends: Shortened time to flowering and maturity in Australia and Argentina

TL;DR: The aim is to quantify the actual magnitude of phenological changes, the relative changes in the duration of pre- and post-flowering phases, and the interaction between changing temperature and sowing date in wheat phenology in eastern Australia and the Pampas between 1957 and 2000.
Book ChapterDOI

Variability in harvest index of grain crops and potential significance for carbon accounting: examples from Australian agriculture

TL;DR: For grain crops, harvest index (HI) is the ratio of harvested grain to total shoot dry matter, and this can be used as a measure of reproductive efficiency as discussed by the authors, and it can also be used to estimate crop carbon (C) balances by applying it to grain yield statistics to determine total shoot drier matter and then calculating crop residues as the difference between shoot C and grain C. Such an approach is widely used in C-accounting systems.
Book ChapterDOI

Improving water use efficiency, nitrogen use efficiency, and radiation use efficiency in field crops under drought stress: A review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an outline of defining water use efficiency, nitrogen use efficiency and radiation use efficiency as well as their relationship under water-limited environments to identify agronomic and physiologically improved strategies for enhancing water, nutrient (nitrogen), and radiation (PAR) use by field crops.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Drought resistance in spring wheat cultivars, 1. Grain yield responses.

R.A. Fischer, +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that, as a group, tall bread wheats would outyield dwarf wheats only under very severe drought, and the yield responses of tall and dwarf bread wheat groups obtained in these experiments agreed with those seen in extensive international trials under dryland conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Number of kernels in wheat crops and the influence of solar radiation and temperature

TL;DR: In this article, the number of kernels per m2 in well managed and watered wheat crops was studied using results of experiments in Mexico and Australia in which short spring wheat cultivars were subjected to independent variation in radiation, largely via artificial shading, and in temperature.
Book ChapterDOI

The Biological Yield and Harvest Index of Cereals as Agronomic and Plant Breeding Criteria

TL;DR: The chapter examines the interaction of biological yield, grain yield, and harvest index with plant density and the situation in which a number of varieties have precisely the same biological yield but different grain yields is graphically presented.
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