Modelling phenology to probe for trade-offs between frost and heat risk in lentil and faba bean
•Trade-off between early flowering reducing risk of heat stress at critical crop stages and frost risk.•Modelled phenological variation with sowing date and cultivar for lentil and faba bean against the climatic patterns of frost and heat.•Geographical patterns in thermal regimes emerged that were a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of agronomy 2021-01, Vol.122, p.126154, Article 126154 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Trade-off between early flowering reducing risk of heat stress at critical crop stages and frost risk.•Modelled phenological variation with sowing date and cultivar for lentil and faba bean against the climatic patterns of frost and heat.•Geographical patterns in thermal regimes emerged that were associated with latitude, altitude and continentality.•Realised warming between 1957 and 2018 shortened the time to critical stage, delayed late frost, advanced heat onset.•Dominant role of frost as the main discriminating factor among locations and main source of variation of the frost-heat window.
Extreme temperatures at critical developmental phases reduce grain yield. Combinations of sowing date and cultivar that favour faster development reduce the likelihood of heat stress but increase the risk of frost at critical phases. Current models are unable to predict pulse yield in response to frost and heat, hence our focus on phenology. Our aim was to model phenological variation with sowing date and cultivar for lentil and faba bean against the climatic patterns of frost and heat in 45 Australian locations that spanned 29 °S-41 °S, 11−340 m.a.s.l., and 1−423 km to the coast.
For both crops, modelled mean and standard deviation of time to flowering were close to actuals and mean prediction error was below 5%. Comparison of actual and modelled time to flowering returned: r = 0.89 (n = 121, P < 0.0001) and modelling efficiency = 0.73 for lentil, and r = 0.96 (n = 123, P < 0.0001) and modelling efficiency = 0.84 for faba bean.
The critical period for yield determination was assumed to span from flowering to 200 °Cd after flowering. Curves fitted to the time-course of frost (< 0 °C) and heat (> 34 °C) probabilities between 1957 and 2018 were used to estimate the date of 10 % frost probability and the date of 30 % heat probability as the boundaries of a frost-heat risk window for the critical period. Out of the 45 locations, 12 were frost-free but with risk of heat, 7 were heat-free but with risk of frost, 3 were frost- and heat-free, and 23 featured a window defined by both frost and heat boundaries. Frost variables discriminated locations more strongly than heat variables. Geographical patterns in thermal regimes emerged that were associated with latitude, altitude and continentality.
Realised warming between 1957 and 2018 advanced the time to 200 °Cd after flowering and shortened the critical period in most locations, particularly in early-sown crops. Comparisons o |
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ISSN: | 1161-0301 1873-7331 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.eja.2020.126154 |