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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2011, Vol. 22 ›› Issue (04): 979-984.

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Effects of atmospheric CO2 concentration eahancement and nitrogen application rate on wheat grain yield and quality.

CUI Hao, SHI Zu-liang, CAI Jian, JIANG Dong, CAO Wei-xing, DAI Ting-bo   

  1. Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Crop Physiology and Ecology in Southern China/Jiangsu Province Hi-Tech Key Laboratory of Information Agriculture, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China
  • Online:2011-04-18 Published:2011-04-18

Abstract: FACE platform was applied to study the effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration on wheat grain yield and quality under two nitrogen(N) application rates. Elevated atmosphericCO2 concentration and applying N increased the grain yield, spike number, grain number per spike, and biomass significantly, but elevated CO2 concentration had no significant effects on harvest index (HI). Under elevated CO2 concentration, there was a significant decrease in the protein, gliadin, gluteinin, and glutein contents of the grain and the sedimentation value of the flour, and a significant increase in the starch and its components contents of the grain; under N application, an inverse was observed. The dough stability time and the dough viscosity characteristics, such as peak viscosity, final viscosity, and setback value, increased significantly under elevated CO2 concentration and high N application rate. The interaction of atmospheric CO2 concentration and N application rate had significantly positive effects on wheat grain yield and  biomass, but less effect on grain quality. Therefore, with elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration in the future, maintaining a higher N application level would benefit wheat grain yield and paste characteristics, and mitigate the decline of grain quality.

Key words: wheat, yield, quality, FACE, nitrogen fertilizer