Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8879405 | Field Crops Research | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Climate change is predicted to increase the frequency of heat stress events during seed production. In two consecutive seasons, plants within a forage rape (Brassica napus L.) seed crop were covered with plastic sheeting to increase ambient air temperature for the period between seed filling (80% seed moisture content) and seed physiological maturity (50% seed moisture content)â¯=â¯T1, between physiological maturity and harvest (14% seed moisture content)â¯=â¯T2, and between 80% seed moisture content and harvestâ¯=â¯T3. This resulted in 47 and 102â¯h when air temperature exceeded 25â¯Â°C for T1, 121 and 173â¯h for T2, and 145 and 228â¯h for T3 compared with 9 and 30â¯h for the uncovered control in each season respectively. Hourly thermal time (T baseâ¯=â¯25â¯Â°C) was calculated for each treatment. Both T1 and T2 resulted in small (2-10%) reductions in germination in each season, but when season data were meaned and analysed, only T2 and T3 significantly reduced germination. Seed mass (as measured by thousand seed weight) was significantly reduced by T1, but not T2, while seed vigour, as assessed by the accelerated ageing and conductivity tests, was significantly reduced by all three treatments, with T3â¯>â¯T2â¯>â¯T1. The number of hours that temperature exceeded 25â¯Â°C was negatively correlated with germination and seed vigour, but not seed mass. Approximately 100â¯h of temperature exceeding 25â¯Â°C, or an hourly thermal time of 300â¯Â°C h (Tbâ¯=â¯25â¯Â°C) were required to reduce the vigour status of the seed lot. Crop management strategies to avoid heat stress during seed development are unlikely to succeed in this environment.
Keywords
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Agronomy and Crop Science
Authors
Muhammad Rashid, John G. Hampton, M. Phil Rolston, Jason A.K. Trethewey, David J. Saville,