A quantitative top-down view of interactions between stresses : theory and analysis of nitrogen-water co-limitation in Mediterranean agro-ecosystems

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dc.contributor Sadras, Victor O
dc.date.accessioned 2012-03-08T00:37:50Z
dc.date.available 2012-03-08T00:37:50Z
dc.date.issued 2005
dc.identifier.uri http://livestocklibrary.com.au/handle/1234/31236
dc.description.abstract The multiple factors constraining the growth, reproduction, and survival of diverse organisms are often non-additive. Research of interacting factors generally involves conceptual models that are specific for target organism, type of stress, and process. As a complement to this reductionist, bottom-up view, in this review I discuss a quantitative top-down approach to interacting stresses based on co-limitation theory. Firstly, co-limitation theory is revised. Co-limitation is operationally identified when the output response of a biological system (e.g. plant or population growth) to two or more inputs is greater than its response to each factor in isolation. The hypothesis of Bloom, Chapin, and Mooney, that plant growth is maximised when it is equally limited by all resources, is reworded in terms of co-limitation and formulated in quantitative terms, i.e. for a given intensity of aggregate stress, plant growth is proportional to degree of resource co-limitation. Emphasis is placed on the problems associated with the quantification of co-limitation. It is proposed that seasonal indices of nitrogen and water stress calculated with crop simulation models can be integrated in indices accounting for the aggregated intensity of water and nitrogen stress (SWN), the degree of water and nitrogen co-limitation (CWN), and the integrated effect of stress and co-limitation (SCWN = CWN/SWN). The expectation is that plant growth and yield should be an inverse function of stress intensity and a direct function of co-limitation, thus proportional to SCWN. Secondly, the constraints imposed by water and nitrogen availability on yield and water use efficiency of wheat crops are highlighted in case studies of low-input farming systems of south-eastern Australia. Thirdly, the concept of co-limitation is applied to the analysis of (i) grain yield responses to water?nitrogen interactions, and (ii) trade-offs between nitrogen- and water-use efficiency. In agreement with theoretical expectations, measured grain yield is found to be proportional to modelled SCWN. Productivity gains associated with intensification of cropping practices are interpreted in terms of a trade-off, whereby water-use efficiency is improved at the expense of nitrogen-use efficiency, thus leading to a higher degree of resource co-limitation.
dc.publisher CSIRO
dc.source.uri http://www.publish.csiro.au/?act=view_file&file_id=AR05073.pdf
dc.subject complexity
dc.subject resources
dc.subject water-use efficiency
dc.subject yield
dc.subject marginal product
dc.subject modelling
dc.subject nitrogen
dc.subject wheat
dc.subject trade-off
dc.title A quantitative top-down view of interactions between stresses : theory and analysis of nitrogen-water co-limitation in Mediterranean agro-ecosystems
dc.type Research
dc.description.version Journal article
dc.identifier.volume 56
dc.identifier.page 1151-1157
dc.identifier.issue 11


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