1996
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/47.5.623
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The duration and rate of grain growth, and harvest index, of wheat (Triticum aestivumL.) in response to temperature and CO2

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Cited by 228 publications
(162 citation statements)
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“…In an experiment on the effects of CO 2 and temperature on wheat yield, it was observed that high temperatures around flowering can result in a large proportion of sterile grains (Mitchell et al 1995, Wheeler et al 1996a, Ferris et al 1998. Although the effect of reduced grain numbers on the final yield could be partly compensated for during grain filling by the production of larger grains, the yield losses could be still significant (Wheeler et al 1996b). Various levels of temperature that affect the grain number were reported.…”
Section: Example Of Impact Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In an experiment on the effects of CO 2 and temperature on wheat yield, it was observed that high temperatures around flowering can result in a large proportion of sterile grains (Mitchell et al 1995, Wheeler et al 1996a, Ferris et al 1998. Although the effect of reduced grain numbers on the final yield could be partly compensated for during grain filling by the production of larger grains, the yield losses could be still significant (Wheeler et al 1996b). Various levels of temperature that affect the grain number were reported.…”
Section: Example Of Impact Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In previous work (Ferris et al 1998), 2 parameters were identified to describe the reduction of grain number due to high temperature at flowering. These parameters are: (1) a critical temperature threshold, T cr , beyond which the final grain number starts to decline linearly with the temperature increase; (2) the slope of grain number decline β; and (3) the potential grain weight, G pot , which determines the ability of the crop to recover the lost yield by growing larger grains (Mitchell et al 1993, Wheeler et al 1996b. It is likely that all 3 parameters are cultivar-specific and are different for wheat cultivars grown in southern and northern Europe.…”
Section: Example Of Impact Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an experiment on the combine effects of CO 2 and temperature on the grain yield, Mitchell et al [99] observed that a temperature of 27 °C or higher applied midway through anthesis could result in a high number of sterile grains and considerable yield losses. Wheeler et al [100] used a temperature gradient tunnel system to demonstrate that at 30 °C or elevated prior to anthesis significantly reduced the grain number and, subsequently, yield. Crop yields are predicted to decrease approximately 10% for every one-degree increase in temperature.…”
Section: Crop Biotechnology In Global Climate Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Photoperiod defines floral initiation and grain filling (P5), stage which is highly influenced by the environment as are previous stages (Wheeler et al, 1996).…”
Section: Yield and Yield Componentsmentioning
confidence: 99%