APSRU Seminar Series 8/06/05
Presenter:
Victor O. Sadras, CSIRO, Adelaide
Topic:
"Yield and water-use efficiency of water- and nitrogen-stressed wheat crops
increase with degree of co-limitation."
Abstract:
Availability of water and nitrogen are key constraints to primary productivity
in arid and semiarid ecosystems. Theoretically, plant growth is maximised when
all resources are equally limiting. This paper tested the hypothesis that for a
given amount of available water, the gap between actual and attainable yield of
dryland crops in semiarid southern Australia is inversely proportional to the
degree of nitrogen and water co-limitation.
Field and simulation experiments were combined in an analysis involving three
steps. Step 1 assessed the capacity of a crop simulation model to estimate yield
and its responses to water and nitrogen inputs in the semiarid Mallee region.
Step 2 derived a boundary function relating grain yield and water availability
using simulations with long-term weather records. Step 3 explored the link
between degree of co-limitation and deviations between actual yield and the
boundary function. Degree of co-limitation (CWN) was calculated as a function of
model-derived nitrogen (NSI) and water stress indices (WSI), i.e. CWN = 1 − |NSI
− WSI|. Stress indices range from zero (no stress) to 1 (maximum stress), and
CWN tends to 1 when both resources impose constraints of similar magnitude to
crop growth.
The field experiment combining locations, seasons and management practices
generated a range of grain yield from 0.6 to 3.8 t ha−1. Water availability,
i.e. seasonal rainfall plus change in soil water content from sowing to harvest,
ranged from 127 to 370 mm. Nitrogen fertiliser varied from nil to 36 kg N ha−1
and inorganic nitrogen in the soil profile at sowing ranged from 29 to 497 kg
ha−1. For these ranges of conditions, the relationship between simulated and
measured yield was statistically undistinguishable from the y = x function.
A factorial modelling experiment combining sites, seasons, initial soil water
content and dose of nitrogen fertiliser was used to derive a boundary function
which provided an objective and independent upper limit for the field data.
Actual yield was below the boundary function in most cases. The difference
between actual and attainable yield was inversely proportional to CWN. This
study thus supported the hypothesis that yield and water-use efficiency of
water- and nitrogen-stressed crops increase with increasing degree of
co-limitation.
The PowerPoint Presentation of this seminar is available here as a pdf file (590KB).