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Wenxin Zhang

Researcher

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Response of plastic film mulched maize to soil and atmospheric water stresses in an arid irrigation area

Author

  • Cheng Li
  • Jingui Wang
  • Yunxin Zhang
  • Hao Feng
  • Wenxin Zhang
  • Kadambot H.M. Siddique

Summary, in English

Water stress can severely decrease crop productivity by restricting photosynthesis, while the use of plastic film mulching can mitigate these water stress effects. However, the intricacies of photosynthetic and stomatal responses to soil water stress under plastic film mulching, particularly when combined with atmospheric water stress, have not been well studied, especially in arid irrigation areas. Limited research has investigated photosynthetic chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, stomatal responses, grain filling process and crop productivity to soil and atmospheric water stress under plastic film mulching. Our study addresses this knowledge gap through a comprehensive field experiment in an arid irrigation area involving maize (Zea mays L.). Well-watered and water deficit conditions with and without plastic film mulching treatments, alone or combined with atmospheric water stress (different vapor pressure deficits) were conducted. Our findings revealed that soil water stress significantly increased stomatal limitations (by 6.4–12.4 %) and may cause non-stomatal limitations. Plastic film mulching significantly improved plant photosynthetic performance (increased net photosynthesis rate by 12.2–39.8 %), chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, and stomatal regulation. Under mulched conditions, soil water stress primarily affected photosynthetic performance through stomatal limitations. Moreover, plastic film mulching significantly improved grain filling process (increased grain-filling rate by 6.3–78.5 %) and productivity (increased grain yield by 12.1–45.8 %) in spring maize subjected to soil water stress. Atmospheric water stress, alone or combined with soil water stress, influenced plant photosynthetic performance, decreasing the net photosynthesis rate and stomatal conductance. Mulching enhanced photosynthetic performance under atmospheric water stress. Overall, the positive effect of mulching on spring maize photosynthetic performance and productivity under soil and atmospheric water stresses holds promise for alleviating water resource shortages and addressing global climate warming issues in arid irrigation areas.

Department/s

  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
  • Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
  • MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system

Publishing year

2024-03

Language

English

Publication/Series

European Journal of Agronomy

Volume

154

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Agricultural Sciences
  • Biophysics

Keywords

  • Grain filling
  • Photosynthesis
  • Plastic film mulching
  • Stomatal limitation
  • Water stress

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1161-0301