Simulation of winter wheat response to variable sowing dates and densities in a high-yielding environment
Author(s) -
Sibylle Dueri,
Hamish Brown,
Senthold Asseng,
Frank Ewert,
Heidi Webber,
Mike George,
Rob Craigie,
Jose Rafael Guarin,
Diego Noleto Luz Pequeno,
Tommaso Stella,
Mukhtar Ahmed,
Phillip D. Alderman,
Bruno Basso,
Andrés G. Berger,
Gennady BrachoMujica,
Davide Cammarano,
Yi Chen,
Benjamin Dumont,
Ehsan Eyshi Rezaei,
Elías Fereres,
Roberto Ferrise,
Thomas Gaiser,
Yujing Gao,
Margarita GarcíaVila,
Sebastian Gayler,
Zvi Hochman,
Gerrit Hoogenboom,
Kurt Christian Kersebaum,
Claas Nendel,
Jørgen E. Olesen,
Gloria Padovan,
Taru Palosuo,
Eckart Priesack,
Johannes Wilhelmus Maria Pullens,
Alfredo Rodríguez,
Reimund P. Rötter,
Margarita RuizRamos,
Mikhail A. Semenov,
Nimai Senapati,
Stefan Siebert,
Amit Kumar Srivastava,
Claudio Stöckle,
Iwan Supit,
Fulu Tao,
Peter J. Thorburn,
Enli Wang,
Tobias K. D. Weber,
Liujun Xiao,
Chuang Zhao,
Jin Zhao,
Zhigan Zhao,
Yan Zhu,
Pierre Martre
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of experimental botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.616
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1460-2431
pISSN - 0022-0957
DOI - 10.1093/jxb/erac221
Subject(s) - sowing , tiller (botany) , agronomy , growing season , photosynthetically active radiation , environmental science , yield (engineering) , crop , biology , photosynthesis , botany , materials science , metallurgy
Crop multi-model ensembles (MME) have proven to be effective in increasing the accuracy of simulations in modelling experiments. However, the ability of MME to capture crop responses to changes in sowing dates and densities has not yet been investigated. These management interventions are some of the main levers for adapting cropping systems to climate change. Here, we explore the performance of a MME of 29 wheat crop models to predict the effect of changing sowing dates and rates on yield and yield components, on two sites located in a high-yielding environment in New Zealand. The experiment was conducted for 6 years and provided 50 combinations of sowing date, sowing density and growing season. We show that the MME simulates seasonal growth of wheat well under standard sowing conditions, but fails under early sowing and high sowing rates. The comparison between observed and simulated in-season fraction of intercepted photosynthetically active radiation (FIPAR) for early sown wheat shows that the MME does not capture the decrease of crop above ground biomass during winter months due to senescence. Models need to better account for tiller competition for light, nutrients, and water during vegetative growth, and early tiller senescence and tiller mortality, which are exacerbated by early sowing, high sowing densities, and warmer winter temperatures.
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