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Rice production in a changing climate: a meta‐analysis of responses to elevated carbon dioxide and elevated ozone concentration
Author(s) -
AINSWORTH ELIZABETH A.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01594.x
Subject(s) - carbon dioxide , fumigation , panicle , population , carbon dioxide in earth's atmosphere , ozone , yield (engineering) , photosynthesis , biomass (ecology) , agronomy , tropospheric ozone , chemistry , zoology , horticulture , environmental science , biology , materials science , biochemistry , demography , organic chemistry , sociology , metallurgy
Rice is arguably the most important food source on the planet and is consumed by over half of the world's population. Considerable increases in yield are required over this century to continue feeding the world's growing population. This meta‐analysis synthesizes the research to date on rice responses to two elements of global change, rising atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration ([CO 2 ]) and rising tropospheric ozone concentration ([O 3 ]). On an average, elevated [CO 2 ] (627 ppm) increased rice yields by 23%. Modest increases in grain mass and larger increases in panicle and grain number contributed to this response. The response of rice to elevated [CO 2 ] varied with fumigation technique. The more closely the fumigation conditions mimicked field conditions, the smaller was the stimulation of yield by elevated [CO 2 ]. Free air concentration enrichment (FACE) experiments showed only a 12% increase in rice yield. The rise in atmospheric [CO 2 ] will be accompanied by increases in tropospheric O 3 and temperature. When compared with rice grown in charcoal‐filtered air, rice exposed to 62 ppb O 3 showed a 14% decrease in yield. Many determinants of yield, including photosynthesis, biomass, leaf area index, grain number and grain mass, were reduced by elevated [O 3 ]. While there have been too few studies of the interaction of CO 2 and O 3 for meta‐analysis, the interaction of temperature and CO 2 has been studied more widely. Elevated temperature treatments negated any enhancement in rice yield at elevated [CO 2 ], which suggests that identifying high temperature tolerant germplasm will be key to realizing yield benefits in the future.