Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice

Rice grain yield and quality are negatively impacted by high temperature stress. Irrigation water temperature significantly affects rice growth and development, thus influencing yield and quality. The role of cooler irrigation water in counteracting high temperature induced damages in rice grain yie...

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Autores principales: Shi, Wanju, Zhang, Xinzhen, Yang, Juan, Impa, Somayanda M., Wang, De, Lai, Yusha, Yang, Zijin, Xu, Hang, Wu, Jinshui, Zhang, Jianhua, Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163943
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author Shi, Wanju
Zhang, Xinzhen
Yang, Juan
Impa, Somayanda M.
Wang, De
Lai, Yusha
Yang, Zijin
Xu, Hang
Wu, Jinshui
Zhang, Jianhua
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
author_browse Impa, Somayanda M.
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
Lai, Yusha
Shi, Wanju
Wang, De
Wu, Jinshui
Xu, Hang
Yang, Juan
Yang, Zijin
Zhang, Jianhua
Zhang, Xinzhen
author_facet Shi, Wanju
Zhang, Xinzhen
Yang, Juan
Impa, Somayanda M.
Wang, De
Lai, Yusha
Yang, Zijin
Xu, Hang
Wu, Jinshui
Zhang, Jianhua
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
author_sort Shi, Wanju
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Rice grain yield and quality are negatively impacted by high temperature stress. Irrigation water temperature significantly affects rice growth and development, thus influencing yield and quality. The role of cooler irrigation water in counteracting high temperature induced damages in rice grain yield and quality are not explored. Hence, in the present study two rice hybrids, Liangyoupeijiu (LYPJ) and IIyou 602 (IIY602) were exposed to heat stress and irrigated with water having different temperatures in a split-split plot experimental design. The stress was imposed starting from heading until maturity under field-based heat tents, over two consecutive years. The maximum day temperature inside the heat tents was set at 38 °C. For the irrigation treatments, two different water sources were used including belowground water with cooler water temperature and pond water with relatively higher water temperature. Daytime mean temperatures in the heat tents were increased by 1.2–2.0 °C across two years, while night-time temperature remained similar at both within and outside the heat tents. Cooler belowground water irrigation did have little effect on air temperature at the canopy level but decreased soil temperature (0.2–1.4 °C) especially under control. Heat stress significantly reduced grain yield (33% to 43%), panicles m−2 (9% to 10%), spikelets m−2 (15% to 22%), grain-filling percentage (13% to 26%) and 1000-grain weight (3% to 5%). Heat stress significantly increased chalkiness and protein content and decreased grain length and amylose content. Grain yield was negatively related to air temperature at the canopy level and soil temperature. Whereas grain quality parameters like chalkiness recorded a significantly positive association with both air and soil temperatures. Irrigating with cooler belowground water reduced the negative effect of heat stress on grain yield by 8.8% in LYPJ, while the same effect was not seen in IIY602, indicating cultivar differences in their response to irrigation water temperature. Our findings reveal that irrigating with cooler belowground water would not significantly mitigate yield loss or improve grain quality under realistic field condition. The outcome of this study adds to the scientific knowledge in understanding the interaction between heat stress and irrigation as a mitigation tool. Irrigation water temperature regulation at the rhizosphere was unable to counteract heat stress damages in rice and hence a more integrated management and genetic options at canopy levels should be explored in the future
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institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
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publisherStr Elsevier
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spelling CGSpace1639432025-05-14T10:24:02Z Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice Shi, Wanju Zhang, Xinzhen Yang, Juan Impa, Somayanda M. Wang, De Lai, Yusha Yang, Zijin Xu, Hang Wu, Jinshui Zhang, Jianhua Jagadish, Krishna S.V. quality heat stress soil temperature air temperature yield loss rhizosphere integrated management Rice grain yield and quality are negatively impacted by high temperature stress. Irrigation water temperature significantly affects rice growth and development, thus influencing yield and quality. The role of cooler irrigation water in counteracting high temperature induced damages in rice grain yield and quality are not explored. Hence, in the present study two rice hybrids, Liangyoupeijiu (LYPJ) and IIyou 602 (IIY602) were exposed to heat stress and irrigated with water having different temperatures in a split-split plot experimental design. The stress was imposed starting from heading until maturity under field-based heat tents, over two consecutive years. The maximum day temperature inside the heat tents was set at 38 °C. For the irrigation treatments, two different water sources were used including belowground water with cooler water temperature and pond water with relatively higher water temperature. Daytime mean temperatures in the heat tents were increased by 1.2–2.0 °C across two years, while night-time temperature remained similar at both within and outside the heat tents. Cooler belowground water irrigation did have little effect on air temperature at the canopy level but decreased soil temperature (0.2–1.4 °C) especially under control. Heat stress significantly reduced grain yield (33% to 43%), panicles m−2 (9% to 10%), spikelets m−2 (15% to 22%), grain-filling percentage (13% to 26%) and 1000-grain weight (3% to 5%). Heat stress significantly increased chalkiness and protein content and decreased grain length and amylose content. Grain yield was negatively related to air temperature at the canopy level and soil temperature. Whereas grain quality parameters like chalkiness recorded a significantly positive association with both air and soil temperatures. Irrigating with cooler belowground water reduced the negative effect of heat stress on grain yield by 8.8% in LYPJ, while the same effect was not seen in IIY602, indicating cultivar differences in their response to irrigation water temperature. Our findings reveal that irrigating with cooler belowground water would not significantly mitigate yield loss or improve grain quality under realistic field condition. The outcome of this study adds to the scientific knowledge in understanding the interaction between heat stress and irrigation as a mitigation tool. Irrigation water temperature regulation at the rhizosphere was unable to counteract heat stress damages in rice and hence a more integrated management and genetic options at canopy levels should be explored in the future 2023-06 2024-12-19T12:53:13Z 2024-12-19T12:53:13Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163943 en Open Access Elsevier Shi, Wanju; Zhang, Xinzhen; Yang, Juan; Impa, Somayanda M.; Wang, De; Lai, Yusha; Yang, Zijin; Xu, Hang; Wu, Jinshui; Zhang, Jianhua and Krishna Jagadish, S.V. 2023. Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice. The Crop Journal, Volume 11 no. 3 p. 904-913
spellingShingle quality
heat stress
soil temperature
air temperature
yield loss
rhizosphere
integrated management
Shi, Wanju
Zhang, Xinzhen
Yang, Juan
Impa, Somayanda M.
Wang, De
Lai, Yusha
Yang, Zijin
Xu, Hang
Wu, Jinshui
Zhang, Jianhua
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice
title Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice
title_full Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice
title_fullStr Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice
title_full_unstemmed Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice
title_short Irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice
title_sort irrigating with cooler water does not reverse high temperature impact on grain yield and quality in hybrid rice
topic quality
heat stress
soil temperature
air temperature
yield loss
rhizosphere
integrated management
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163943
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