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Current rice models underestimate yield losses from short-term heat stresses.
Sun, Ting; Hasegawa, Toshihiro; Liu, Bing; Tang, Liang; Liu, Leilei; Cao, Weixing; Zhu, Yan.
  • Sun T; National Engineering and Technology Center for Information Agriculture, Engineering Research Center for Smart Agriculture, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory for Crop System Analysis and Decision Making, Ministry of Agriculture, Jiangsu, Key Laboratory for Information Agriculture, Jiangsu Collabo
  • Hasegawa T; Agro-Environmental Research Division, Tohoku Agricultural Research Center, National Agricultural and Food Research Organization (NARO), Morioka, Japan.
  • Liu B; National Engineering and Technology Center for Information Agriculture, Engineering Research Center for Smart Agriculture, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory for Crop System Analysis and Decision Making, Ministry of Agriculture, Jiangsu, Key Laboratory for Information Agriculture, Jiangsu Collabo
  • Tang L; National Engineering and Technology Center for Information Agriculture, Engineering Research Center for Smart Agriculture, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory for Crop System Analysis and Decision Making, Ministry of Agriculture, Jiangsu, Key Laboratory for Information Agriculture, Jiangsu Collabo
  • Liu L; National Engineering and Technology Center for Information Agriculture, Engineering Research Center for Smart Agriculture, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory for Crop System Analysis and Decision Making, Ministry of Agriculture, Jiangsu, Key Laboratory for Information Agriculture, Jiangsu Collabo
  • Cao W; National Engineering and Technology Center for Information Agriculture, Engineering Research Center for Smart Agriculture, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory for Crop System Analysis and Decision Making, Ministry of Agriculture, Jiangsu, Key Laboratory for Information Agriculture, Jiangsu Collabo
  • Zhu Y; National Engineering and Technology Center for Information Agriculture, Engineering Research Center for Smart Agriculture, Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory for Crop System Analysis and Decision Making, Ministry of Agriculture, Jiangsu, Key Laboratory for Information Agriculture, Jiangsu Collabo
Glob Chang Biol ; 27(2): 402-416, 2021 Jan.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33063940
Crop production will likely face enormous challenges against the occurrences of extreme climatic events projected under future climate change. Heat waves that occur at critical stages of the reproductive phase have detrimental impacts on the grain yield formation of rice (Oryza sativa). Accurate estimates of these impacts are essential to evaluate the effects of climate change on rice. However, the accuracy of these predictions by crop models has not been extensively tested. In this study, we evaluated 14 rice growth models against four year phytotron experiments with four levels of heat treatments imposed at different times after flowering. We found that all models greatly underestimated the negative effects of heat on grain yield, suggesting that yield projections with these models do not reflect food shocks that may occur under short-term extreme heat stress (SEHS). As a result, crop model ensembles do not help to provide accurate estimates of grain yield under heat stress. We examined the functions of grain-setting rate response to temperature (TRF_GS) used in eight models and showed that adjusting the effective periods of TRF_GS improved the model performance, especially for models simulating accumulative daily temperature effects. For TRF_GS which uses daily maximum temperature averaged for the effective period, the models provided better grain yield estimates by using maximum temperatures averaged only when daily maximum temperatures exceeded the base temperature (Tbase ). An alternative method based on heating-degree days and stage-dependent heat sensitivity parameters further decreased the prediction uncertainty of grain yield under heat stress, where stage-dependent heat sensitivity was more important than heat dose for model improvement under SEHS. These results suggest the limitation of the applicability of existing rice models to variable climatic conditions and the urgent need for an alternative grain-setting function accounting for the stage-dependent heat sensitivity.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Oryza Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Año: 2021 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Oryza Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Año: 2021 Tipo del documento: Article