Effect of elevated temperature and CO2 on growth of two early-maturing potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) varieties

Climate change will significantly reduce potato yields across the world and have a profound impact on food security. However, the effects of changing climatic conditions on various traits of early-maturing potatoes at their different stages of growth are not clear. Therefore, 19 plant traits were in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liu, C., Li, Y., Liu, Y., Kear, P., Feng, Y., Wang, L., Wang, D., Luo, M., Li, J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2025
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159931
Description
Summary:Climate change will significantly reduce potato yields across the world and have a profound impact on food security. However, the effects of changing climatic conditions on various traits of early-maturing potatoes at their different stages of growth are not clear. Therefore, 19 plant traits were investigated across the entire growth period of two major early-maturing potato varieties: Favorita and Zhongshu 5. These were grown in a temperature/CO2-controlled walk-in chamber under four treatments that simulated the changes predicted in these two climate factors by 2100: Control (ambient temperature 21 °C; ambient CO2 400 μmol mol-1), eT (elevated temperature 24 °C; ambient CO2 400 μmol mol-1), eCO2 (ambient temperature, 21 °C; elevated CO2 800 μmol mol-1), and eTeCO2 (elevated temperature 24 °C; elevated CO2 800 μmol mol-1). Elevating ambient temperature by 3 °C (eT), elevating CO2 concentration to 800 μmol mol-1 (eCO2), and a combination of both treatments (eTeCO2) brought forward potato tuber initiation by approximately 10 days. eT treatment reduced the yield of Favorita by 83% and Zhongshu 5 by 52%, but simultaneously elevating the CO2 concentration (eTeCO2) alleviated the negative effects of higher temperature on plant morphology and biomass. Favorita exhibited greater stability than Zhongshu 5 under all treatment conditions. These findings will guide the development, cultivation, and research of climate-resilient potatoes as an adaptation to climate change to strengthen food security.