Premium
Application of Nitrogen Fertilizer at Heading Stage Improves Rice Quality under Elevated Temperature during Grain‐Filling Stage
Author(s) -
Dou Zhi,
Tang She,
Li Ganghua,
Liu Zhenghui,
Ding Chengqiang,
Chen Lin,
Wang Shaohua,
Ding Yanfeng
Publication year - 2017
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/cropsci2016.05.0350
Subject(s) - agronomy , fertilizer , grain quality , stage (stratigraphy) , heading (navigation) , nitrogen , oryza sativa , global warming , environmental science , biology , zoology , chemistry , climate change , geology , ecology , geodesy , biochemistry , gene , paleontology , organic chemistry
Global warming would deteriorate rice ( Oryza sativa L.) quality, especially chalk characteristic. To better cope with the challenges from global warming, the effects of nitrogen (N) fertilizer at heading stage on rice quality under elevated temperature during grain‐filling stage were investigated. Four different growth regimes, including no warming without N fertilizer at heading stage (CK), elevated temperature without N fertilizer at heading stage (ET), elevated temperature with N fertilizer at heading stage (ET+N), no warming with N fertilizer at heading stage (CK+N), were conducted. Elevated temperature during grain filling was achieved by a free‐air temperature enhancement facility with the increase of 4°C in ET and 3.7°C in ET+N. Results showed that elevated temperature decreased rice appearance quality and cooking quality and increased rice nutritional quality and eating quality. Grain‐filling rate and amyloplast development for both superior and inferior spikelets were obviously accelerated during early grain‐filling stage by elevated temperature. The application of N fertilizer at heading stage could inhibit the deterioration of rice quality, particularly for chalk performance, and may be associated with the alleviation of grain‐filling rate and amyloplast development. The above evidence indicated that the application of N fertilizer at heading stage is efficient to mitigate rice quality deterioration under higher temperatures in the Yangtze River Valley.