Autor: |
Jamshidi, Sajad, Murgia, Teresa, Morales‐Ona, Ana G., Cerioli, Tommaso, Famoso, Adam N., Cammarano, Davide, Wang, Diane R. |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Crop Science; Jul2024, Vol. 64 Issue 4, p2274-2287, 14p |
Abstrakt: |
The performance of novel genetic combinations under untested environmental scenarios and management practices can be virtually examined using process‐based crop models. Indeed, there has been a long‐standing interest in the crop modeling community to expand the utility of process‐based models to broader germplasm panels (e.g., breeding lines or diversity panels). Yet, there is often a misalignment between data needed to parameterize process‐based crop models and data routinely collected by breeding programs. To address this gap, we leverage a dataset from a long‐term trial on advanced experimental lines and released varieties from the Louisiana rice breeding program to calibrate and evaluate the decision support for agrotechnology transfer (DSSAT) CSM‐CERES‐Rice model. Next, we use data collected by the same program on a large collection of breeding lines to generate numerous in silico genotypes and evaluate their performance across different management practices (different planting dates) and three climatic conditions (current climate and two future scenarios based on CMIP6‐SSP5‐8.5 climate projections). Our simulations indicate that shifting the current planting date (i.e., March) back by 1–2 months (to January) under moderate warming conditions (+1.3°C warmer and 41% higher CO2 level), and 2–3 months (to December) under extreme warming conditions (+4.1°C warmer and 133% higher CO2 level) could potentially offset the negative impacts of the increased future temperature. Given earlier planting, shorter duration varieties (i.e., those with shorter growing degree day requirements during the vegetative and grain filling periods) are found to be more favorable for supporting high yields. Such varieties with a shorter thermal time to anthesis are found to remain just outside of the current pool of variation for this trait. Opportunities and challenges for leveraging breeding data in process‐based modeling to derive insights into adaptation strategies for future climates are further discussed. Core Ideas: There has been a long‐standing interest in the crop modeling community to extend the utility of process‐based models to breeding.Data required for models are often misaligned with data routinely collected from applied breeding programs.Parameterization of the CERES‐Rice model was informed using historical and recent data collected from the Louisiana rice breeding program.The impact of future climate, planting dates, and novel genetic combinations on the yield and phenology was tested.The range of genetic variability for phenology in the current breeding program to adapt varieties to future conditions was assessed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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