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Improving the predictions of leaf photosynthesis during and after short‐term heat stress with current rice models.

Authors :
Sun, Ting
Zhang, Xiaohu
Lv, Suyu
Lin, Xuanhao
Ma, Jifeng
Liu, Jiaming
Fang, Qizhao
Tang, Liang
Liu, Leilei
Cao, Weixing
Liu, Bing
Zhu, Yan
Source :
Plant, Cell & Environment. Nov2023, Vol. 46 Issue 11, p3353-3370. 18p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

In response to increasing global warming, extreme heat stress significantly alters photosynthetic production. While numerous studies have investigated the temperature effects on photosynthesis, factors like vapour pressure deficit (VPD), leaf nitrogen, and feedback of sink limitation during and after extreme heat stress remain underexplored. This study assessed photosynthesis calculations in seven rice growth models using observed maximum photosynthetic rate (Pmax) during and after short‐term extreme heat stress in multi‐year environment‐controlled experiments. Biochemical models (FvCB‐type) outperformed light response curve‐based models (LRC‐type) when incorporating observed leaf nitrogen, photosynthetically active radiation, temperatures, and intercellular CO2 concentration (Ci) as inputs. Prediction uncertainty during heat stress treatment primarily resulted from variation in temperatures and Ci. Improving FVPD (the slope for the linear effect of VPD on Ci/Ca) to be temperature‐dependent, rather than constant as in original models, significantly improved Ci prediction accuracy under heat stress. Leaf nitrogen response functions led to model variation in leaf photosynthesis predictions after heat stress, which was mitigated by calibrated nitrogen response functions based on active photosynthetic nitrogen. Additionally, accounting for observed differences in carbohydrate accumulation between panicles and stems during grain filling improved the feedback of sink limitation, reducing Ci overestimation under heat stress treatments. Summary statement: The predictions of rice leaf photosynthesis during and after heat stress were improved by modifying the effects of temperature, VPD, nitrogen, and feedback of sink limitation, based on multi‐model comparison approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01407791
Volume :
46
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Plant, Cell & Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172437236
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/pce.14683