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Analysis of maize canopy development under water stress and incorporation into the ADEL-Maize model

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 22:01 authored by Song, Y, Birch, CJ, Hanan, J
Substantial progress in modelling crop architecture has been made under optimal watering conditions; however, crop production is often exposed to water stress. In this research, we develop methods for implementing the simulation of maize (Zea mays L.) canopy architectural development under water stress using data from a maize field trial in 2006-07. Data of leaf number, leaf and internode extension were collected using non-destructive and destructive sampling at 2-3 day intervals. Water stress reduced the extension rate of organs and, therefore, their final length, the reduction being greater as severity of water stress increased. The duration of extension of organs in most phytomers was not significantly affected by water stress. Also, the rate of extension during the linear phase responded linearly to fraction of extractable soil water. An existing 3-D architectural model ADEL-Maize was revised using relationships developed in this study to better incorporate effects of water stress on organ extension and production. Simulated canopy production under three water regimes was validated by comparing predicted final leaf and internode length, plant height and leaf area to independent observations. The analysis and simulation showed that maize organ extension and final length under water stress can be adequately represented by simple linear patterns that are easily integrated into models.

History

Publication title

Functional Plant Biology

Volume

35

Issue

10

Pagination

925-935

ISSN

1445-4408

Department/School

Tasmanian Institute of Agriculture (TIA)

Publisher

CSIRO

Place of publication

Australia

Repository Status

  • Restricted

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