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Evaluation of Genetic Traits for Improving Productivity and Adaptation of Groundnut to Climate Change in India

Authors :
Uttam Kumar
Kenneth J. Boote
S. N. Nigam
James W. Jones
Piara Singh
K Srinivas
Source :
Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science. 198:399-413
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Wiley, 2012.

Abstract

Anticipated climate change will alter the temperature and rainfall characteristics of crop growing seasons. This will require genetic improvement of crops for adapting to future climates for higher yields. The CROPGRO model for groundnut was used to evaluate genetic traits of Virginia and Spanish types of groundnut for various climate scenarios of India. The analysis revealed that productivity of groundnut can be increased in current and future climates by adjusting the duration of various life-cycle phases, especially the seed-filling to physiological maturity (SD-PM). Increased maximum leaf photosynthesis rate (AMAX), increased partitioning to reproductive organs (XFRT) and increased individual seed-fill duration (SFDUR) all contributed to the increase in pod yield in all climates. More determinate pod set (shorter PODUR) was beneficial only in the water deficit environments. The positive effect of increasing specific leaf area (SLA) and leaf size (SIZLF) on pod yield was greater in environments more favourable for plant growth. Increasing reproductive tolerance to high temperature by 2 °C increased pod yield of groundnut in warmer environments, especially where the crop often suffers from drought. Increased adaptive partitioning to roots (ATOP) increased drought resistance of groundnut on high water-holding capacity soils. Combination of traits had additive effects and pod yield increased substantially. These results indicate that the CROPGRO model can be used to assess the potential of individual or combination of plant traits for guiding breeding of improved groundnut varieties for current and future climates.

Details

ISSN :
09312250
Volume :
198
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........947c739929e46391dbfb0be69c1eac1a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-037x.2012.00522.x