Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012

Water deficit has been signaled as an important determinant of grain yield (GY) gaps between potential and actual GYs. Breeding for improved water as well as solar radiation productivities is a sustainable means to reduce this gap. The aim of this study was to evaluate breeding effects on GY and its...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Curin, Facundo, Severini, Alan David, Gonzalez, Fernanda Gabriela, Otegui, María Elena
Formato: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378429019316211
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/6570
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2019.107683
_version_ 1855035699431997440
author Curin, Facundo
Severini, Alan David
Gonzalez, Fernanda Gabriela
Otegui, María Elena
author_browse Curin, Facundo
Gonzalez, Fernanda Gabriela
Otegui, María Elena
Severini, Alan David
author_facet Curin, Facundo
Severini, Alan David
Gonzalez, Fernanda Gabriela
Otegui, María Elena
author_sort Curin, Facundo
collection INTA Digital
description Water deficit has been signaled as an important determinant of grain yield (GY) gaps between potential and actual GYs. Breeding for improved water as well as solar radiation productivities is a sustainable means to reduce this gap. The aim of this study was to evaluate breeding effects on GY and its physiological determinants, including water (WUE) and radiation (RUE) use efficiencies, of temperate maize hybrids grown under a wide range of environmental conditions in Argentina. We hypothesized that breeding focused on GY performance and broad adaptation produced an increase in crop biomass linked to an increased tolerance to adverse growing conditions, a trend associated with an increase in WUE and/or RUE. For this purpose, hybrids were grown under three stand densities and eight environmental conditions in the main target environment for the production of temperate hybrids in Argentina. Analyzed traits were GY, total shoot biomass (BT) production, harvest index (HI = GY/BT), crop evapotranspiration (ETC), crop radiation interception (IPARC: cumulative amount of intercepted incident photosynthetically active radiation), radiation use efficiency (RUE = BT/IPARC), water use efficiency (WUE) for biomass production (WUEB,ETc= BT/ETC) and WUE for GY production (WUEGY,ETc= GY/ETC). No breeding effect was registered on ETC and IPARC, whereas significant breeding effects (P < 0.05) were detected on GY (0.5 % YOR−1 from 1980 onwards). The latter were due to the improvement of BT (from 1993 onwards) as well as of HI (between 1980 and 1993), with gains of 0.5 % YOR−1 in both cases. Mentioned trends were associated with a significant increase in RUE (0.7 % YOR−1 from 1993 onwards) and consequently in WUEB,ETc (0.6 % YOR−1 from 1993 onwards) and WUEGY,ETc (0.5 % YOR−1 from 1980 onwards). Results demonstrated that breeding efforts, which have been driven almost exclusively by GY improvement, had no evident effect on the crop water use but had clear effects on crop biomass production and its partitioning. These unintended positive effects of breeding on RUE and WUEs are welcome on a global scale, considering that predicted trends of increasing human demand for water will require increased water productivity rather than increased water use by crops.
format info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo
id INTA6570
institution Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA -Argentina)
language Inglés
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling INTA65702019-12-26T12:21:09Z Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012 Curin, Facundo Severini, Alan David Gonzalez, Fernanda Gabriela Otegui, María Elena Maíz Zea mays Rendimiento Biomasa Uso del Agua Maize Yields Biomass Water Use Hybrids Híbridos Efecto Reproductivo Water deficit has been signaled as an important determinant of grain yield (GY) gaps between potential and actual GYs. Breeding for improved water as well as solar radiation productivities is a sustainable means to reduce this gap. The aim of this study was to evaluate breeding effects on GY and its physiological determinants, including water (WUE) and radiation (RUE) use efficiencies, of temperate maize hybrids grown under a wide range of environmental conditions in Argentina. We hypothesized that breeding focused on GY performance and broad adaptation produced an increase in crop biomass linked to an increased tolerance to adverse growing conditions, a trend associated with an increase in WUE and/or RUE. For this purpose, hybrids were grown under three stand densities and eight environmental conditions in the main target environment for the production of temperate hybrids in Argentina. Analyzed traits were GY, total shoot biomass (BT) production, harvest index (HI = GY/BT), crop evapotranspiration (ETC), crop radiation interception (IPARC: cumulative amount of intercepted incident photosynthetically active radiation), radiation use efficiency (RUE = BT/IPARC), water use efficiency (WUE) for biomass production (WUEB,ETc= BT/ETC) and WUE for GY production (WUEGY,ETc= GY/ETC). No breeding effect was registered on ETC and IPARC, whereas significant breeding effects (P < 0.05) were detected on GY (0.5 % YOR−1 from 1980 onwards). The latter were due to the improvement of BT (from 1993 onwards) as well as of HI (between 1980 and 1993), with gains of 0.5 % YOR−1 in both cases. Mentioned trends were associated with a significant increase in RUE (0.7 % YOR−1 from 1993 onwards) and consequently in WUEB,ETc (0.6 % YOR−1 from 1993 onwards) and WUEGY,ETc (0.5 % YOR−1 from 1980 onwards). Results demonstrated that breeding efforts, which have been driven almost exclusively by GY improvement, had no evident effect on the crop water use but had clear effects on crop biomass production and its partitioning. These unintended positive effects of breeding on RUE and WUEs are welcome on a global scale, considering that predicted trends of increasing human demand for water will require increased water productivity rather than increased water use by crops. EEA Pergamino Fil: Curín, Facundo. CONICET-UNNOBA. CITNOBA, (Pergamino); Argentina Fil: Severini, Alan. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Pergamino. Sección Ecofisiología; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Noroeste de la Provincia de Buenos Aire. Escuela de Ciencias Agrarias, Naturales y Ambientales (ECANA-UNNOBA); Argentina Fil: González, Fernanda G. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Pergamino. Sección Ecofisiología; Argentina. CONICET-UNNOBA.CITNOBA; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Noroeste de la Provincia de Buenos Aire. Escuela de Ciencias Agrarias, Naturales y Ambientales (ECANA-UNNOBA); Argentina Fil: Otegui, María E. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Agronomía. Departamento de Producción Vegetal; Argentina 2019-12-26T12:16:02Z 2019-12-26T12:16:02Z 2019-11 info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378429019316211 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/6570 0378-4290 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2019.107683 eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess application/pdf 1980-2012 Elsevier Field Crops Research 246 : 107683. (February 2020)
spellingShingle Maíz
Zea mays
Rendimiento
Biomasa
Uso del Agua
Maize
Yields
Biomass
Water Use
Hybrids
Híbridos
Efecto Reproductivo
Curin, Facundo
Severini, Alan David
Gonzalez, Fernanda Gabriela
Otegui, María Elena
Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012
title Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012
title_full Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012
title_fullStr Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012
title_full_unstemmed Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012
title_short Water and radiation use efficiencies in maize: breeding effects on single-cross Argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012
title_sort water and radiation use efficiencies in maize breeding effects on single cross argentine hybrids released between 1980 and 2012
topic Maíz
Zea mays
Rendimiento
Biomasa
Uso del Agua
Maize
Yields
Biomass
Water Use
Hybrids
Híbridos
Efecto Reproductivo
url https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378429019316211
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/6570
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2019.107683
work_keys_str_mv AT curinfacundo waterandradiationuseefficienciesinmaizebreedingeffectsonsinglecrossargentinehybridsreleasedbetween1980and2012
AT severinialandavid waterandradiationuseefficienciesinmaizebreedingeffectsonsinglecrossargentinehybridsreleasedbetween1980and2012
AT gonzalezfernandagabriela waterandradiationuseefficienciesinmaizebreedingeffectsonsinglecrossargentinehybridsreleasedbetween1980and2012
AT oteguimariaelena waterandradiationuseefficienciesinmaizebreedingeffectsonsinglecrossargentinehybridsreleasedbetween1980and2012