Environmental determination of spring wheat yield in a climatic transition zone under global warming

Understanding environmental determination of crop yield plays a critical role in agricultural. management in resource-limited areas. The climatic transition zone was a naturally ideal place to study. the relations between environmental factors and crop yield, due to its large annual variability of c...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of biometeorology 2022-03, Vol.66 (3), p.481-491
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Funian, Lei, Jun, Wang, Runyuan, Zhang, Qiang, Qi, Yue, Zhang, Kai, Guo, Qu, Wang, Heling
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 481
container_title International journal of biometeorology
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creator Zhao, Funian
Lei, Jun
Wang, Runyuan
Zhang, Qiang
Qi, Yue
Zhang, Kai
Guo, Qu
Wang, Heling
description Understanding environmental determination of crop yield plays a critical role in agricultural. management in resource-limited areas. The climatic transition zone was a naturally ideal place to study. the relations between environmental factors and crop yield, due to its large annual variability of climatic factors and high speed of temperature increase under global warming. Our objectives were to identify the most critical environmental factor in determining spring wheat yield and analyze the convergence and divergence of water-yield relations for spring wheat in a typical climatic transition zone (semi-arid area). The study was conducted at two locations, Dingxi and Pengyang in Northwest China, with a long-term experiment (1987–2018) and two short-term irrigation experiments. Meanwhile, data of water use and spring wheat yield was collected from a series of previously published literature in the study area. The highest spring wheat yield was obtained under year pattern with higher soil water content at sowing (SWCS) and lower atmospheric dryness condition (ADC, the difference between reference evapotranspiration and precipitation during spring wheat growing season). SWCS was more important than precipitation during the growing season (PGS) in determining spring wheat yield in the study area. The relations between available water supply, water use, and spring wheat yield were convergence. However, SWCS had an impact on the relationship between yield and PGS and SWCS-yield relation was affected by ADC. We concluded that precipitation in 7 months before sowing was the dominant factor determining spring wheat yield in the climatic transition zone under global warming whereas the impact of high atmospheric evaporative demand resulted from the increasing temperature on crop yields and SWCS-yield relation must be taken into account for the analysis of environmental determination of spring wheat yield
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subjects Agricultural management
Agricultural production
Agriculture
Animal Physiology
Annual variations
Arid regions
Biological and Medical Physics
Biophysics
China
Climate
Climate change
Climate variability
Convergence
Convergence and divergence
Crop yield
Crops
Divergence
Earth and Environmental Science
Environment
Environmental factors
Environmental Health
Evapotranspiration
Global Warming
Growing season
Meteorology
Moisture content
Original Paper
Plant Physiology
Precipitation
Seasons
Semi arid areas
Semiarid zones
Soil water
Spring
Spring (season)
Spring precipitation
Spring wheat
Temperature rise
Transition zone
Triticum
Water
Water content
Water supply
Water use
Water yield
Wheat
Wheat yield
title Environmental determination of spring wheat yield in a climatic transition zone under global warming
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