Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/22504
Title: Heat stress effects around flowering on kernel set of temperate and tropical maize hybrids
Authors: Edreira, Juan I. Rattalino
Sammarro, D
Otegui, Maria E
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Ziraat Fakültesi/Tarla Bitkileri Bölümü.
Budaklı Çarpıcı, Emine
AAH-1513-2021
42560925400
Keywords: Maize
Heat stress
Flowering dynamics
Silk exposure dynamics
Kernel set
Genotypes
Intra-specific competition
Pollen water potentials
Grain-yield components
Sowing date
Dry-matter
Synchronous pollination
Number determination
Drought tolerance
Plant-growth
Crop growth
Zea mays
Agricultural land
Field survey
Flowering
Genotype
Growth rate
Heat shock
Heating
Hybrid
Maize
Pollination
Tropical environment
Agriculture
Issue Date: 14-Aug-2011
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Edreira, JIR. vd. (2011)."Heat stress effects around flowering on kernel set of temperate and tropical maize hybrids". Field Crops Research, 123(2), 62-73.
Abstract: Final kernel number in the uppermost ear of temperate maize (lea mays L) hybrids is smaller than the potential represented by the number of florets differentiated in this ear, and than the number of silks exposed from it (i.e., kernel set < 1). This trend increases when stressful conditions affect plant growth immediately before (GS(1)) or during (GS(2))silking, but the magnitude of change has not been documented for heat stress effects and hybrids of tropical background. In this work we evaluated mentioned traits in field experiments (Exp(1) and Exp(2)), including (i) two temperature regimes, control and heated during daytime hours (ca. 33-40 degrees C at ear level), (ii) two 15-d periods during GS(1) and GS(2), and (iii) three hybrids (Te: temperate; Tr: tropical; TeTr: Te x Tr). We also measured crop anthesis and silking dynamics, silk exposure of individual plants, and the anthesis-silking interval (ASI). Three sources of kernel loss were identified: decreased floret differentiation, pollination failure, and kernel abortion. Heating affected all surveyed traits, but negative effects on flowering dynamics were larger (i) for anthesis than for silking with the concomitant decrease in ASI, and (ii) for GS(1) than for GS(2). Heat also caused a decrease in the number of (i) florets only when performed during GS, (-15.5% in Exp, and -9.1% in Exp(2)), and only among Te and TeTr hybrids, (ii) exposed silks of all GS x Hybrid combinations, and (iii) harvestable kernels (mean of -51.8% in GS(1) and -74.5% in GS(2)). Kernel abortion explained 95% of the variation in final kernel numbers (P < 0.001), and negative heat effects were larger on this loss (38.6%) than on other losses (<= 11.3%). The tropical genetic background conferred an enhanced capacity for enduring most negative effects of heating.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2011.04.015
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378429011001407
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/22504
ISSN: 0378-4290
Appears in Collections:Scopus
Web of Science

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