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Injury and Yield Response of Soybean to Chronic Doses of Ozone and Soil Moisture Deficit 1
Author(s) -
Heagle Allen S.,
Flagler Richard B.,
Patterson Robert P.,
Lesser Virginia M.,
Shafer Steven R.,
Heck Walter W.
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
crop science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.76
H-Index - 147
eISSN - 1435-0653
pISSN - 0011-183X
DOI - 10.2135/cropsci1987.0011183x002700050039x
Subject(s) - moisture stress , moisture , point of delivery , water content , horticulture , growing season , zoology , yield (engineering) , biology , sowing , field experiment , precipitation , charcoal , agronomy , chemistry , materials science , physics , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry , meteorology , engineering , metallurgy
A 2‐yr field study was performed near Raleigh, NC, to determine injury and yield response of soybean [ Glycine max (L.) Merr. ‘Davis’] to long‐term O 3 exposure and soil moisture deficit. Two levels of soil moisture [well‐watered (WW) and water‐stressed (WS)] were tained by differential irrigating during periods of low precipitation. Open‐top field chambers were used to expose plants to different levels of O 3 for 109 days. The 1983 season was drier and hotter than the 1984 season. In 1983, plants in the WS plots were under moderate to severe moisture stress from shortly after planting (V2) until midway through flowering (R3) and they yielded approximately half as much as those in the WW plots. In 1984, plants in the WS plots were under moderate moisture stress during flowering and pod‐fill stages and they yielded 20% less than those in the WW plots. In 1983, there was a significant relationship between O 3 concentration and yield in the WW plots, but not in the WS plots. In 1984, similar linear responses to O 3 occurred at both levels of soil moisture. Compared to yield in the charcoal‐filtered‐air (control) treatment (2‐yr 7 h day −1 mean O 3 concentration of 0.027 μL L −1 ), predicted yield loss for WW plots at ambient O 3 levels (2‐yr 7 h day −1 mean of 0.054 μL L −1 ) was 12% in 1983 and 14% in 1984. The predicted loss value for the WS plants in 1984 was 12%.