ORCID Profile
0000-0002-3581-6144
Current Organisation
University of Melbourne
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Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 13-03-2018
Publisher: MDPI AG
Date: 28-11-2022
Abstract: Bread wheat, one of the largest broadacre crops, often experiences various environmental stresses during critical growth stages. Terminal drought and heat stress are the primary causes of wheat yield reduction worldwide. This study aimed to determine the drought and heat stress tolerance level of a group of 46 erse wheat genotypes procured from the Australian Grains Gene Bank, Horsham, VIC Australia. Two separate drought stress (DS) and heat stress (HS) pot experiments were conducted in separate growth chambers. Ten days after complete anthesis, drought (40 ± 3% field capacity for 14 days) and heat stress (36/22 °C for three consecutive days) were induced. A significant genotype × environment interaction was observed and explained by various morpho-physiological traits, including rapid, non-destructive infrared thermal imaging for computational water stress indices. Except for a spike length in DS and harvest index in HS, the analysis of variance showed significant differences for all the recorded traits. Results showed grains per spike, grains weight per spike, spike fertility, delayed flag leaf senescence, and cooler canopy temperature were positively associated with grain yield under DS and HS. The flag leaf senescence and chlorophyll fluorescence were used to measure each genotype’s stay-green phenotype and photosystem II activity after DS and HS. This study identified the top ten best and five lowest-performing genotypes from drought and heat stress experiments based on their overall performance. Results suggest that if heat or drought adaptive traits are brought together in a single genotype, grain yield can be improved further, particularly in a rainfed cropping environment.
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
Date: 03-08-2022
Abstract: The in idual and cumulative effects of drought stress (DS) and heat stress (HS) are the primary cause of grain yield (GY) reduction in a rainfed agricultural system. Crop failures due to DS and HS are predicted to increase in the coming years due to increasingly severe weather events. Plant available silicon (Si, H 4 SiO 4 ) has been widely reported for its beneficial effects on plant development, productivity, and attenuating physiological and biochemical impairments caused by various abiotic stresses. The current study investigated the impact of pre-sowing Si treatment on six contrasting wheat cultivars (four drought and heat stress-tolerant and two drought and heat stress-susceptible) under in idual and combined effects of drought and heat stress at an early grain-filling stage. DS, HS, and drought-heat combined stress (DHS) significantly ( p & 0.05) altered morpho-physiological and biochemical attributes in susceptible and tolerant wheat cultivars. However, results showed that Si treatment significantly improved various stress-affected morpho-physiological and biochemical traits, including GY (& %) and yield components. Si treatment significantly ( p & 0.001) increased the reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging antioxidant activities at the cellular level, which is linked with higher abiotic stress tolerance in wheat. With Si treatment, osmolytes concentration increased significantly by & % in tolerant and susceptible wheat cultivars. Similarly, computational water stress indices (canopy temperature, crop water stress index, and canopy temperature depression) also improved with Si treatment under DS, HS, and DHS in susceptible and tolerant wheat cultivars. The study concludes that Si treatment has the potential to mitigate the detrimental effects of in idual and combined stress of DS, HS, and DHS at an early grain-filling stage in susceptible and tolerant wheat cultivars in a controlled environment. These findings also provide a foundation for future research to investigate Si-induced tolerance mechanisms in susceptible and tolerant wheat cultivars at the molecular level.
Publisher: Journal of Global Innovations in Agricultural and Social Sciences (JGIASS)
Date: 2016
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 12-2011
No related grants have been discovered for Waseem Ashfaq.