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Canopy temperature for simulation of heat stress in irrigated wheat in a semi-arid environment: A multi-model comparison.

Authors :
Webber, Heidi
Martre, Pierre
Asseng, Senthold
Kimball, Bruce
White, Jeffrey
Ottman, Michael
Wall, Gerard W.
De Sanctis, Giacomo
Doltra, Jordi
Grant, Robert
Kassie, Belay
Maiorano, Andrea
Olesen, Jørgen E.
Ripoche, Dominique
Rezaei, Ehsan Eyshi
Semenov, Mikhail A.
Stratonovitch, Pierre
Ewert, Frank
Source :
Field Crops Research. Feb2017, Vol. 202, p21-35. 15p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Even brief periods of high temperatures occurring around flowering and during grain filling can severely reduce grain yield in cereals. Recently, ecophysiological and crop models have begun to represent such phenomena. Most models use air temperature ( T air ) in their heat stress responses despite evidence that crop canopy temperature ( T c ) better explains grain yield losses. T c can deviate significantly from T air based on climatic factors and the crop water status. The broad objective of this study was to evaluate whether simulation of T c improves the ability of crop models to simulate heat stress impacts on wheat under irrigated conditions. Nine process-based models, each using one of three broad approaches (empirical, EMP; energy balance assuming neutral atmospheric stability, EBN; and energy balance correcting for the atmospheric stability conditions, EBSC) to simulate T c , simulated grain yield under a range of temperature conditions. The models varied widely in their ability to reproduce the measured T c with the commonly used EBN models performing much worse than either EMP or EBSC. Use of T c to account for heat stress effects did improve simulations compared to using only T air to a relatively minor extent, but the models that additionally use T c on various other processes as well did not have better yield simulations. Models that simulated yield well under heat stress had varying skill in simulating T c . For example, the EBN models had very poor simulations of T c but performed very well in simulating grain yield. These results highlight the need to more systematically understand and model heat stress events in wheat. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03784290
Volume :
202
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Field Crops Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
120833326
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2015.10.009