High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice

Elevated [CO2] (e[CO2]) environments have been predicted to improve rice yields under future climate. However, a concomitant rise in temperature could negate e[CO2] impact on plants, presenting a serious challenge for crop improvement. High temperature (HT) stress tolerant NL-44 and high yielding ba...

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Autores principales: Chaturvedi, Ashish K., Bahuguna, Rajeev N., Shah, Divya, Pal, Madan, Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2017
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165004
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author Chaturvedi, Ashish K.
Bahuguna, Rajeev N.
Shah, Divya
Pal, Madan
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
author_browse Bahuguna, Rajeev N.
Chaturvedi, Ashish K.
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
Pal, Madan
Shah, Divya
author_facet Chaturvedi, Ashish K.
Bahuguna, Rajeev N.
Shah, Divya
Pal, Madan
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
author_sort Chaturvedi, Ashish K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Elevated [CO2] (e[CO2]) environments have been predicted to improve rice yields under future climate. However, a concomitant rise in temperature could negate e[CO2] impact on plants, presenting a serious challenge for crop improvement. High temperature (HT) stress tolerant NL-44 and high yielding basmati Pusa 1121 rice cultivars, were exposed to e[CO2] (from panicle initiation to maturity) and a combination of e[CO2] + HT (from heading to maturity) using field based open top chambers. Elevated [CO2] significantly increased photosynthesis, seed-set, panicle weight and grain weight across both cultivars, more prominently with Pusa 1121. Conversely, e[CO2] + HT during flowering and early grain filling significantly reduced seed-set and 1000 grain weight, respectively. Averaged across both the cultivars, grain yield was reduced by 18 to 29%. Despite highly positive response with e[CO2], Pusa 1121 exposure to e[CO2] + HT led to significant reduction in seed-set and sink starch metabolism enzymatic activity. Interestingly, NL-44 maintained higher seed-set and resilience with starch metabolism enzymes under e[CO2] + HT exposure. Developing rice cultivars with higher [CO2] responsiveness incorporated with increased tolerance to high temperatures during flowering and grain filling using donors such as NL-44, will minimize the negative impact of heat stress and increase global food productivity, benefiting from [CO2] rich environments.
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spelling CGSpace1650042025-05-14T10:24:18Z High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice Chaturvedi, Ashish K. Bahuguna, Rajeev N. Shah, Divya Pal, Madan Jagadish, Krishna S.V. Elevated [CO2] (e[CO2]) environments have been predicted to improve rice yields under future climate. However, a concomitant rise in temperature could negate e[CO2] impact on plants, presenting a serious challenge for crop improvement. High temperature (HT) stress tolerant NL-44 and high yielding basmati Pusa 1121 rice cultivars, were exposed to e[CO2] (from panicle initiation to maturity) and a combination of e[CO2] + HT (from heading to maturity) using field based open top chambers. Elevated [CO2] significantly increased photosynthesis, seed-set, panicle weight and grain weight across both cultivars, more prominently with Pusa 1121. Conversely, e[CO2] + HT during flowering and early grain filling significantly reduced seed-set and 1000 grain weight, respectively. Averaged across both the cultivars, grain yield was reduced by 18 to 29%. Despite highly positive response with e[CO2], Pusa 1121 exposure to e[CO2] + HT led to significant reduction in seed-set and sink starch metabolism enzymatic activity. Interestingly, NL-44 maintained higher seed-set and resilience with starch metabolism enzymes under e[CO2] + HT exposure. Developing rice cultivars with higher [CO2] responsiveness incorporated with increased tolerance to high temperatures during flowering and grain filling using donors such as NL-44, will minimize the negative impact of heat stress and increase global food productivity, benefiting from [CO2] rich environments. 2017-08-15 2024-12-19T12:54:36Z 2024-12-19T12:54:36Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165004 en Open Access Springer Chaturvedi, Ashish K.; Bahuguna, Rajeev N.; Shah, Divya; Pal, Madan and Jagadish, S. V. Krishna. 2017. High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice. Sci Rep, Volume 7, no. 1
spellingShingle Chaturvedi, Ashish K.
Bahuguna, Rajeev N.
Shah, Divya
Pal, Madan
Jagadish, Krishna S.V.
High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice
title High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice
title_full High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice
title_fullStr High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice
title_full_unstemmed High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice
title_short High temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated CO2 on assimilate partitioning and sink-strength in rice
title_sort high temperature stress during flowering and grain filling offsets beneficial impact of elevated co2 on assimilate partitioning and sink strength in rice
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165004
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