Crop Science Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in Crop Sci 36:142-149 (1996)
© 1996 Crop Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Contribution of Individual Culms to Yield of Salt-Stressed Wheat

Eugene V. Maas*, Scott M. Lesch, Leland E. Francois and Catherine M. Grieve

USDA-ARS, U. S. Salinity Laboratory, 450 W. Big Springs Rd., Riverside,CA, 92507

* Corresponding author (!a031crivussl).

Grain yield in wheat (Triticum aestivum L. emend. Thell.) is highly dependent upon the number of spike-bearing tillers produced by each plant. Soil salinity can greatly decrease their number and productivity. Knowing the contribution of specific tillers is essential for breeding salt-tolerant genotypes and for developing wheat growth simulation models. Our objective was to determine the effects of soil salinity on the contribution of individual culms to total grain and dry matter yields of two spring wheat cultivars, Anza and Yecora Rojo. Plants were grown in Pachappa fine sandy loam soil (mixed, thermic, Mollic Haploxeralf) in outdoor lysimeters for 2 yr. Three salinity treatments were imposed by irrigating with waters containing equal weights of NaCl and CaCl2 (electrical conductivities {cong} 1, 12, or 18 dS m-1). Despite substantial losses in the number of tillers at moderate levels of salt stress, grain yields of the main stem (MS) and tillers Tl and T2 were as great or greater than those on nonstressed plants of both cultivars. The contribution of the MS to yield on a land area basis increased from about 25 to 35% in nonsaline treatments to over 80% with increasing salinity. The contribution of primary tillers ( {cong} 58-65% in nonsaline conditions) decreased substantially only at the highest salinity levels. Salinity stress significantly decreased the number of spikelets per spike but the number of kernels per spike either increased or was unaffected except at the highest level of stress. Increasing salinity decreased total straw yields primarily because of fewer tillers, but dry weights of the MSs and remaining tillers were also smaller. Results show that loss of spike-bearing tillers accounts for most of the yield reduction in salt-stressed wheat.


Contribution from the U. S. Salinity Laboratory, USDA-ARS, Riverside, CA.

Received for publication July 11, 1994.


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L. Zeng and M. C. Shannon
Salinity Effects on Seedling Growth and Yield Components of Rice
Crop Sci., July 1, 2000; 40(4): 996 - 1003.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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