The limit to wheat water-use efficiency in eastern Australia. II. Influence of rainfall patterns

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dc.contributor Sadras, V O
dc.contributor Rodriguez, D
dc.date.accessioned 2012-03-08T00:40:50Z
dc.date.available 2012-03-08T00:40:50Z
dc.date.issued 2007
dc.identifier.uri http://livestocklibrary.com.au/handle/1234/31601
dc.description.abstract We investigated the influence of rainfall patterns on the water-use efficiency of wheat in a transect between Horsham (36�S) and Emerald (23�S) in eastern Australia. Water-use efficiency was defined in terms of biomass and transpiration, WUEB/T, and grain yield and evapotranspiration, WUEY/ET. Our working hypothesis is that latitudinal trends in WUEY/ET of water-limited crops are the complex result of southward increasing WUEB/T and soil evaporation, and season-dependent trends in harvest index. Our approach included: (a) analysis of long-term records to establish latitudinal gradients of amount, seasonality, and size-structure of rainfall; and (b) modelling wheat development, growth, yield, water budget components, and derived variables including WUEB/T and WUEY/ET. Annual median rainfall declined from around 600�mm in northern locations to 380�mm in the south. Median seasonal rain (from sowing to harvest) doubled between Emerald and Horsham, whereas median off-season rainfall (harvest to sowing) ranged from 460�mm at Emerald to 156�mm at Horsham. The contribution of small events (? 5�mm) to seasonal rainfall was negligible at Emerald (median 15�mm) and substantial at Horsham (105�mm). Power law coefficients (?), i.e. the slopes of the regression between size and number of events in a log-log scale, captured the latitudinal gradient characterised by an increasing dominance of small events from north to south during the growing season. Median modelled WUEB/T increased from 46�kg/ha.mm at Emerald to 73�kg/ha.mm at Horsham, in response to decreasing atmospheric demand. Median modelled soil evaporation during the growing season increased from 70�mm at Emerald to 172�mm at Horsham. This was explained by the size-structure of rainfall characterised with parameter ?, rather than by the total amount of rainfall. Median modelled harvest index ranged from 0.25 to 0.34 across locations, and had a season-dependent latitudinal pattern, i.e. it was greater in northern locations in dry seasons in association with wetter soil profiles at sowing. There was a season-dependent latitudinal pattern in modelled WUEY/ET. In drier seasons, high soil evaporation driven by a very strong dominance of small events, and lower harvest index override the putative advantage of low atmospheric demand and associated higher WUEB/T in southern locations, hence the significant southwards decrease in WUEY/ET. In wetter seasons, when large events contribute a significant proportion of seasonal rain, higher WUEB/T in southern locations may translate into high WUEY/ET. Linear boundary functions (French-Schultz type models) accounting for latitudinal gradients in its parameters, slope, and x-intercept, were fitted to scatter-plots of modelled yield v. evapotranspiration. The x-intercept of the model is re-interpreted in terms of rainfall size structure, and the slope or efficiency multiplier is described in terms of the radiation, temperature, and air humidity properties of the environment. Implications for crop management and breeding are discussed.
dc.publisher CSIRO
dc.source.uri http://www.publish.csiro.au/?act=view_file&file_id=AR06376.pdf
dc.subject Triticum aestivum
dc.subject climate
dc.subject harvest index
dc.subject biomass
dc.subject power law
dc.subject seasonality
dc.subject nitrogen
dc.subject breeding
dc.subject modelling
dc.subject root
dc.subject evaporation
dc.subject transpiration
dc.subject water
dc.subject resource pulse
dc.title The limit to wheat water-use efficiency in eastern Australia. II. Influence of rainfall patterns
dc.type Research
dc.description.version Journal article
dc.identifier.volume 58
dc.identifier.page 657-669
dc.identifier.issue 7


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