Evidence for improved pollen viability as the mechanism for film antitranspirant mitigation of drought damage to wheat yield
2016
Weerasinghe, Minuka M. | Kettlewell, P. S. (Peter S) | Grove, Ivan G. | Hare, Martin C.
Application of film antitranspirant to wheat during late stem extension reduces drought damage to yield, but the mechanism is unknown. Field experiments under rain shelters were conducted over 3 years to test the hypothesis that film antitranspirant applied before meiosis alleviates drought-induced losses of pollen viability, grain number and yield. The film antitranspirant di-1-p-menthene was applied at third-node stage, and meiosis occurred at the early boot stage, with a range of 11–16 days after spray application in different years. Irrigated, unsprayed plots were included under the rain-shelters, and pollen viability, measured in 2 years in these plots, averaged 95.3%. Drought reduced pollen viability to 80.1% in unirrigated, unsprayed plots, but only to 88.6% in unirrigated plots treated with film antitranspirant. Grain number and yield of irrigated plots, measured in all years, were 16529m-2 and 9.55tha-1, respectively, on average. These were reduced by drought to 11410m-2 and 6.31tha-1 in unirrigated, unsprayed plots, but only to 12878m-2 and 6.97tha-1 in unirrigated plots treated with film antitranspirant. Thus compared with unirrigated, unsprayed plots, antitranspirant gave a grain yield benefit of 0.66tha-1. Further work is needed to validate the pollen viability mechanism in different climatic zones and with a wide range of cultivars.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]الكلمات المفتاحية الخاصة بالمكنز الزراعي (أجروفوك)
المعلومات البيبليوغرافية
تم تزويد هذا السجل من قبل National Agricultural Library