Physiological responses and post-stress recovery in field-grown maize exposed to high temperatures at flowering
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Southern Cross Publishing
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Heat stress affects physiological traits and biomass production in major crops, including maize. We researched the responses of
maximum efficiency of photosystem II (Fv/Fm), relative cell injury (RCI), stomatal conductance (gs
), internal CO2 concentration (Ci
),
leaf photosynthesis (CER), and crop growth rate (CGR) in two maize cultivars exposed to high temperatures around silking (R1)
under field conditions. Temperature regimes (i.e. control and heat) were performed during the pre-silking (–15d R1 to R1) and
post-silking (R1+2d to R1+17d) periods. In the heat treatments, polyethylene shelters were used in order to increase daytime
temperatures around midday (from 10 A.M. to 2 P.M.) during each period (i.e., pre- and post-silking). In the control treatments, the
shelters remained open during the entire growing season. Gas exchange variables, Fv/Fm and relative cell injury (RCI) were
measured on ear leaves. CGR was estimated based on biomass samples. CER and Fv/Fm presented maximum reductions at the end
of the daytime heating. However, 30 min after the shelters were reopened, Fv/Fm of heated leaves reached values similar to
controls, which were closely linked to CER recoveries. RCI was negatively associated with Fv/Fm, and cell injury increased gradually
as heating continued. Ci was unaffected by heat treatment, indicating that gs was not the primary cause of CER reduction. Heat
stress decreased CGR, and the reduction was positively associated with CER and Fv/Fm in both heating periods. We attempted to
scale from cell to crop level and identify some physiological traits that could be helpful in breeding programs for heat stress
tolerance.
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Neiff, Nicolás, et al., 2019. Physiological responses and post-stress recovery in field-grown maize exposed to high temperatures at flowering. Australian Journal of Crop Science. Lismore: Southern Cross Publishing, vol. 13, no. 12, p. 2053-2061. E-ISSN: 1835-2707. DOI: https://doi.org/10.21475/ajcs.19.13.12.p2070.
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