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Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain

Improving winter wheat grain yield and water use efficiency (WUE) with minimum irrigation is very important for ensuring agricultural and ecological sustainability in the Northern China Plain (NCP). A three-year field experiment was conducted to determine how single irrigation can improve grain yiel...

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Autores principales: Xu, Xuexin, Zhang, Yinghua, Li, Jinpeng, Zhang, Meng, Zhou, Xiaonan, Zhou, Shunli, Wang, Zhimin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5843274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29518163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193895
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author Xu, Xuexin
Zhang, Yinghua
Li, Jinpeng
Zhang, Meng
Zhou, Xiaonan
Zhou, Shunli
Wang, Zhimin
author_facet Xu, Xuexin
Zhang, Yinghua
Li, Jinpeng
Zhang, Meng
Zhou, Xiaonan
Zhou, Shunli
Wang, Zhimin
author_sort Xu, Xuexin
collection PubMed
description Improving winter wheat grain yield and water use efficiency (WUE) with minimum irrigation is very important for ensuring agricultural and ecological sustainability in the Northern China Plain (NCP). A three-year field experiment was conducted to determine how single irrigation can improve grain yield and WUE by manipulating the “sink-source” relationships. To achieve this, no-irrigation after sowing (W0) as a control, and five single irrigation treatments after sowing (75 mm of each irrigation) were established. They included irrigation at upstanding (W(U)), irrigation at jointing (W(J)), irrigation at booting (W(B)), irrigation at anthesis (W(A)) and irrigation at medium milk (W(M)). Results showed that compared with no-irrigation after sowing (W0), W(U), W(J), W(B), W(A) and W(M) significantly improved mean grain yield by 14.1%, 19.9%, 17.9%, 11.6%, and 7.5%, respectively. W(J) achieved the highest grain yield (8653.1 kg ha(-1)) and WUE (20.3 kg ha(-1) mm(-1)), and W(B) observed the same level of grain yield and WUE as W(J). In comparison to W(U), W(J) and W(B) coordinated pre- and post-anthesis water use while reducing pre-anthesis and total evapotranspiration (ET). They also retained higher soil water content above 180 cm soil layers at anthesis, increased post-anthesis water use, and ultimately increased WUE. W(J) and W(B) optimized population quantity and individual leaf size, delayed leaf senescence, extended grain-filling duration, improved post-anthesis biomass and biomass remobilization (source supply capacity) as well as post-anthesis biomass per unit anthesis leaf area (P(ost)BA-leaf ratio). W(J) also optimized the allocation of assimilation, increased the spike partitioning index (SPI, spike biomass/biomass at anthesis) and grain production efficiency (GPE, the ratio of grain number to biomass at anthesis), thus improved mean sink capacity by 28.1%, 5.7%, 21.9%, and 26.7% in comparison to W0, W(U), W(A) and W(M), respectively. Compared with W(A) and W(M), W(J) and W(B) also increased sink capacity, post-anthesis biomass and biomass remobilization. These results demonstrated that single irrigation at jointing or booting could improve grain yield and WUE via coordinating the “source-sink” relationships with the high sink capacity and source supply capacity. Therefore, we propose that under adequate soil moisture conditions before sowing, single irrigation scheme from jointing to booting with 75 mm irrigation amount is the optimal minimum irrigation practice for wheat production in this region.
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spelling pubmed-58432742018-03-23 Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain Xu, Xuexin Zhang, Yinghua Li, Jinpeng Zhang, Meng Zhou, Xiaonan Zhou, Shunli Wang, Zhimin PLoS One Research Article Improving winter wheat grain yield and water use efficiency (WUE) with minimum irrigation is very important for ensuring agricultural and ecological sustainability in the Northern China Plain (NCP). A three-year field experiment was conducted to determine how single irrigation can improve grain yield and WUE by manipulating the “sink-source” relationships. To achieve this, no-irrigation after sowing (W0) as a control, and five single irrigation treatments after sowing (75 mm of each irrigation) were established. They included irrigation at upstanding (W(U)), irrigation at jointing (W(J)), irrigation at booting (W(B)), irrigation at anthesis (W(A)) and irrigation at medium milk (W(M)). Results showed that compared with no-irrigation after sowing (W0), W(U), W(J), W(B), W(A) and W(M) significantly improved mean grain yield by 14.1%, 19.9%, 17.9%, 11.6%, and 7.5%, respectively. W(J) achieved the highest grain yield (8653.1 kg ha(-1)) and WUE (20.3 kg ha(-1) mm(-1)), and W(B) observed the same level of grain yield and WUE as W(J). In comparison to W(U), W(J) and W(B) coordinated pre- and post-anthesis water use while reducing pre-anthesis and total evapotranspiration (ET). They also retained higher soil water content above 180 cm soil layers at anthesis, increased post-anthesis water use, and ultimately increased WUE. W(J) and W(B) optimized population quantity and individual leaf size, delayed leaf senescence, extended grain-filling duration, improved post-anthesis biomass and biomass remobilization (source supply capacity) as well as post-anthesis biomass per unit anthesis leaf area (P(ost)BA-leaf ratio). W(J) also optimized the allocation of assimilation, increased the spike partitioning index (SPI, spike biomass/biomass at anthesis) and grain production efficiency (GPE, the ratio of grain number to biomass at anthesis), thus improved mean sink capacity by 28.1%, 5.7%, 21.9%, and 26.7% in comparison to W0, W(U), W(A) and W(M), respectively. Compared with W(A) and W(M), W(J) and W(B) also increased sink capacity, post-anthesis biomass and biomass remobilization. These results demonstrated that single irrigation at jointing or booting could improve grain yield and WUE via coordinating the “source-sink” relationships with the high sink capacity and source supply capacity. Therefore, we propose that under adequate soil moisture conditions before sowing, single irrigation scheme from jointing to booting with 75 mm irrigation amount is the optimal minimum irrigation practice for wheat production in this region. Public Library of Science 2018-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5843274/ /pubmed/29518163 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193895 Text en © 2018 Xu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Xu, Xuexin
Zhang, Yinghua
Li, Jinpeng
Zhang, Meng
Zhou, Xiaonan
Zhou, Shunli
Wang, Zhimin
Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain
title Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain
title_full Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain
title_fullStr Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain
title_full_unstemmed Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain
title_short Optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in Northern China Plain
title_sort optimizing single irrigation scheme to improve water use efficiency by manipulating winter wheat sink-source relationships in northern china plain
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5843274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29518163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193895
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