Benchmarking water-use efficiency of rainfed wheat in dry environments

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dc.contributor Sadras, VO
dc.contributor Angus, JF
dc.date.accessioned 2012-03-08T00:39:10Z
dc.date.available 2012-03-08T00:39:10Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier.uri http://livestocklibrary.com.au/handle/1234/31490
dc.description.abstract Attainable water-use efficiency relates attainable yield, i.e. the best yield achieved through skilful use of available technology, and seasonal evapotranspiration (ET). For wheat crops in south-eastern Australia, there is a common, often large gap between actual and attainable water-use efficiency. To evaluate whether this gap is only an Australian problem or a general feature of dry environments, we compared water-use efficiency of rainfed wheat in south-eastern Australia, the North American Great Plains, China Loess Plateau, and the Mediterranean Basin. A dataset of published data was compiled (n = 691); water-use efficiency (WUEY/ET) was calculated as the ratio between actual grain yield and seasonal ET. Maximum WUEY/ET was 22�kg�grain/ha.mm. Average WUEY/ET (kg�grain/ha.mm) was 9.9 for south-eastern Australia, 9.8 for the China Loess Plateau, 8.9 for the northern Great Plains of North America, 7.6 for the Mediterranean Basin, and 5.3 for the southern-central Great Plains; the variation in average WUEY/ET was largely accounted for by reference evapotranspiration around flowering. Despite substantial differences in important factors including soils, precipitation patterns, and management practices, crops in all these environments had similarly low average WUEY/ET, between 32 and 44% of attainable efficiency. We conclude that low water-use efficiency of Australian crops is not a local problem, but a widespread feature of dry environments. Yield gap analysis for crops in the Mallee region of Australia revealed low availability of phosphorus, late sowing, and subsoil chemical constraints as key factors reducing water-use efficiency, largely through their effects on soil evaporation.
dc.publisher CSIRO
dc.source.uri http://www.publish.csiro.au/?act=view_file&file_id=AR05359.pdf
dc.subject Australia
dc.subject China
dc.subject evapotranspiration
dc.subject Great Plains
dc.subject Mediterranean Basin
dc.subject nitrogen
dc.subject soil evaporation
dc.subject yield
dc.title Benchmarking water-use efficiency of rainfed wheat in dry environments
dc.type Research
dc.description.version Journal article
dc.identifier.volume 57
dc.identifier.page 847-856
dc.identifier.issue 8


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