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- Title
Elevated CO<sub>2</sub> , drought and soil nitrogen effects on wheat grain quality.
- Authors
Kimball, B. A; Morris, C. F; Pinter, P. J; Wall, G. W; Hunsaker, D. J; Adamsen, F. J; LaMorte, R. L; Leavitt, S. W; Thompson, T. L; Matthias, A. D; Brooks, T. J
- Abstract
Summary • The likely consequences of future high levels of atmospheric CO2 concentration on wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) grain nutritional and baking quality were determined. • Two free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE; 550 mmol mol-1 ) experiments were conducted at ample (Wet) and limiting (Dry) levels of irrigation, and a further two experiments at ample (High-N) and limiting (Low-N) nitrogen concentrations. Harvested grain samples were subjected to a battery of nutritional and bread-making quality tests. • The Dry treatment improved grain quality slightly (protein +2%; bread loaf volume +3%). By contrast, Low-N decreased quality drastically (protein -36%; loaf volume -26%). At ample water and N, FACE decreased quality slightly (protein -5%; loaf volume -2%) in the irrigation experiments and there was no change in the nitrogen experiments. At Low-N, FACE tended to make the deleterious effects of Low-N worse (protein -33% and -39%, at ambient CO2 and FACE, respectively; loaf volume -22% and -29% at ambient CO2 and FACE, respectively). • The data suggest that future elevated CO2 concentrations will exacerbate the deleterious effects of low soil nitrogen on grain quality, but with ample nitrogen fertilizer, the effects will be minor.
- Subjects
ARIZONA; MARICOPA (Ariz.); UNITED States; WHEATGRASS (Wheat); CARBON dioxide; NITROGEN in soils
- Publication
New Phytologist, 2001, Vol 150, Issue 2, p295
- ISSN
0028-646X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1046/j.1469-8137.2001.00107.x