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Changes in yield attributes and K allocation in wheat as affected by K deficiency and elevated CO2

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BackgroundElevated carbon dioxide enhances biomass production and final crop yield of C3 species as a consequence of increased photosynthesis, water use efficiency and RuBisCO saturation. However, this enhancement is limited… Click to show full abstract

BackgroundElevated carbon dioxide enhances biomass production and final crop yield of C3 species as a consequence of increased photosynthesis, water use efficiency and RuBisCO saturation. However, this enhancement is limited by environmental conditions such as nutrient deficiencies. This study evaluates the interactive effects of K supply (deficient or adequate) and atmospheric CO2 (ambient or elevated) on grain yield and yield related attributes along with allocation of K in different shoot parts (i.e. grains, leaves, stem and peduncle) in bread wheat.MethodsBread wheat (T. aestivum cv. Tahirova) was cultivated in soil fertilized with adequate or deficient K in pots under ambient (420 μmol mol−1) or elevated (700 μmol mol−1) atmospheric CO2 conditions in dedicated plant growth chambers. At full maturity, plants were harvested and grain yield and yield attributes along with K status of grains, peduncle, leaves and stem parts were determined.ResultsWhile K deficiency severely reduced grain yield and yield attributes under both ambient (a-CO2) and elevated (e-CO2) CO2 conditions, e-CO2 significantly enhanced grain yield even in K-deficient plants through maintaining a greater harvest index, spikes per plant and grain weight and thus increased overall K use efficiency. Deficient-K treatment significantly increased grain K concentration as a consequence of “concentration effect”. On the contrary, K concentration in leaf, stem and peduncle was severely decreased whereas e-CO2 had an additive effect on the decrease in K concentrations. Consequently, in deficient-K plants K content (total K accumulated/taken up) in all shoot parts including grains was reduced to only a fraction of adequate-K plants. Moreover, deficient-K plants tended to allocate a greater portion of K in grains as compared to other shoot parts. Elevated CO2 also enhanced K allocation into grains particularly in deficient-K plants.ConclusionPotassium deficiency severely reduces grain yield and biomass production in bread wheat in both a-CO2 and e-CO2 environments, however e-CO2 partly alleviates the detrimental effect of K deficiency on grain yield, but not straw yield. Plants under K deficiency stress allocated a greater portion of K in the grains and e-CO2 augmented this effect. In wheat, any one of peduncle, leaf or stem K concentration is a better measure of overall plant K nutritional status as compared to grain K, which may be severely biased due to “concentration effect” in K-deficient plants.

Keywords: grain yield; wheat; co2; yield attributes; yield; deficiency

Journal Title: Plant and Soil
Year Published: 2018

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