Water stress permanently alters shoot architecture in common bean plants
The effects of water stress on crop yield through modifications of plant architecture are vital to crop performance such as common bean plants. To assess the extent of this effect, an outdoor experiment was conducted in which common bean plants received five treatments: fully irrigated, and irrigation deficits of 30% and 50% applied in flowering or pod formation stages onwards. Evapotranspiration, number and length of pods, shoot biomass, grain yield and harvest index were assessed, and architectural traits (length and thickness of internodes, length of petioles and petiolules, length and width of leaflet blades and angles) were recorded and analyzed using regression models. The highest irrigation deficit in the flowering stage had the most pronounced effect on plant architecture. Stressed plants were shorter, leaves were smaller and pointing downward, indicating that plants permanently altered their exposure to sunlight. The combined effect of irrigation deficit and less exposure to light lead to shorter pods, less shoot biomass and lower grain yield. Fitted empirical models between water deficit and plant architecture can be included in architectural simulation models to quantify plant light interception under water stress, which, in turn, can supply crop models adding a second order of water stress effects on crop yield simulation.
Main Authors: | Durigon, Angelica, Evers, Jochem, Metselaar, Klaas, de Jong van Lier, Quirijn |
---|---|
Format: | Article/Letter to editor biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | Dummy-variable regression, Functional-structural plant modeling, Phyllochron, Plant development, Plant organ, |
Online Access: | https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/water-stress-permanently-alters-shoot-architecture-in-common-bean |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
Identifying and quantifying the contribution of maize plant traits to nitrogen uptake and use through plant modelling
by: Lu, Jie, et al. -
Regression with dummy variables /
by: Hardy, Melissa H.
Published: (1993) -
Experimental and modeling evidence of carbon limitation of leaf appearance rate for spring and winter wheat
by: Baumont, Maeva, et al. -
Adaptive responses of quinoa to diverse agro - ecological environments along an altitudinal gradient in North West Argentina
by: Curti, Ramiro Néstor, et al. -
Morphogenesis of dwarf elephant grass clones in response to intensity and frequency of defoliation in dry and rainy seasons.
by: GOMIDE, C. A. de M., et al.
Published: (2011-10-05)