The effect of timing and severity of water deficit on growth, development, yield accumulation and nitrogen fixation of mungbean


Autoria(s): Thomas; Robertson, MJ; Fukai, S; Peoples, MB
Contribuinte(s)

P.H. Graham

J.M. Lenne and D. Chatel

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Mungbean (Vigna radiata L.), as a dryland grain legume, is exposed to varying timing and severity of water deficit, which results in variability in grain yield, nitrogen accumulation and grain quality. In this field study, mungbean crops were exposed to varying timing and severity of water deficit in order to examine: (1) contribution of the second flush of pods to final grain yield with variable timing of relief from water deficit, (2) the sensitivity to water deficit of the accumulation of biomass and nitrogen (N) and its partitioning to grain, and (3) how the timing of water deficit affects the pattern of harvest index (HI) increase through pod filling. The results showed that the contribution of the second flush to final yield is highly variable (1-56%) and can be considerable, especially where mid-season stress is relieved at early pod filling. The capacity to produce a second flush of pods did not compensate fully for yield reduction due to water stress. Relief from mid-season stress also resulted in continued leaf production, N-2 fixation and vegetative biomass accumulation during pod filling. Despite the wide variation in the degree of change in vegetative biomass and N during pod filling, there were strong relationships between grain yield and net-above-ground biomass at maturity, and grain N and above-ground N at maturity. Only in the extreme situations were HI and nitrogen HI affected noticeably. In those treatments where there was a large second flush of pods, there was a pronounced biphasic pattern to pod number production, with HI also progressing through two distinct phases of increase separated by a plateau. The proportion of grain yield contributed to by biomass produced before pod filling varied from 0 to 61% with the contribution greatest under terminal water deficit. There was a larger effect of water deficit on N accumulation, and hence N-2 fixation, than on biomass accumulation. The study confirmed the applicability of a number of long-standing physiological concepts to the analysis of the effect of water deficit on mungbean, but also highlighted the difficulty of accounting for timing effects of water deficit where second flushes of pods alter canopy development, biomass and yield accumulation, and N dynamics. Crown Copyright (C) 2003 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:73836

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier

Palavras-Chave #Agronomy #Mungbean #Green Gram #Drought #Partitioning #Phenology #Grain Yield #Dinitrogen Fixation #Grain Legumes #Stress #Field #Irrigation #Cultivars #Abundance #Wilczek #Regimes #Dry #C1 #300202 Plant Nutrition #620108 Grain legumes
Tipo

Journal Article