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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Wheat genotypes selected under optimum conditions and their response to water and heat stress

Briceno-Felix, Guillermo Ariel 08 July 1996 (has links)
Graduation date: 1997
2

Effects of single and multiple stressors on communities of wheat and wild oats

Pfleeger, Thomas G. 01 May 1998 (has links)
Most plant toxicology tests developed in support of environmental laws use a single stress applied to an individual plant. While tests using individual species or stresses require fewer resources and are easier to interpret, they are under increasing criticism for being unrealistic and missing important ecological interactions. The objective of this research was to increase our understanding of how plants and plant communities respond to a variety of stressors. Model plant communities of spring wheat (Triticum aestivum) and wild oats (Avena fatua) were planted at three densities and five proportions in the field. Puccinia recondita, the causal agent of wheat leaf rust, was inoculated on half of the plots. Disease severity was estimated as percent of wheat flag leaves covered by rust lesions. Plants were harvested at maturity and measured. Seeding density rarely had a significant influence on rust severity, probably because tiller density differed little as a result of compensation due to increased tillering at low seeding densities. In contrast, increasing the proportion of wheat in mixtures with wild oats consistently increased wheat leaf rust severity. There was no evidence to suggest that wild oats acted as a barrier to inoculum movement. Wild oats' effect on wheat leaf rust was probably through its competitive reduction of wheat tiller density. Both wheat and wild oats seed weight decreased as the proportion of wild oats increased in mixtures. This indicates that intraspecific competition was stronger in wild oats than was intraspecific competition with wheat in these mixtures. Wild oats generally did not respond to the presence of leaf rust on wheat, while wheat was negatively impacted. Thus, there was little competitive advantage to wild oats when its competitor (wheat) was diseased. A small subset of the field treatments was treated with ozone, because of the limited space available in the open-top ozone exposure chambers. Wheat height and aboveground biomass generally decreased with ozone exposure and with increasing disease severity in both years, while total grain weight decreased significantly only with disease and only in one year. There was no interaction between ozone and disease, regardless of cultivar, density, or plant response variable measured. There was little evidence that ozone exposure affected the severity of wheat leaf rust. In general, there seemed to be a lack of interactions among the different stressors and the results varied considerably depending on year and wheat cultivar. / Graduation date: 1998
3

Effect of nitrogen and water stresses during tillering and grain- filling in wheat

Ashraf, Muhammad, 1952- 11 September 1992 (has links)
The CERES-Wheat Crop Growth and Development model treats temperature, nitrogen and water stresses as limiting factors. For each day the model calculates a stress index for temperature, N and water, compares the magnitude of the indices, and then adjusts the calculated daily potential growth using the index of the most severe stress, while ignoring the other stresses. Under the conditions in Oregon, however, mild N and water stress will often be present together in about equal degree of stress. Some published results suggest that both stresses affect growth and yield under those conditions. Therefore, this work was undertaken to evaluate the combined effects of N and water stress on growth and development of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). To make such an evaluation one must be able to control both N and water supplies to the plant and the response of the plant to these two variables must be measured at different growth stages. A system of imposing controlled plant water stress developed by Snow and Tingey (1985) was adapted and evaluated for its potential to impose controlled levels of both N and water stress to single wheat plants. Using a 12 mmol N and 4 cm pathlength as optimum N and water supply treatment, 2 mmol N and 12 cm pathlength and a 1 bar standard ceramic disc in the floral foam column as N and water stress treatments during tillering resulted in 15 % reduction in tillers/plant for limits to the N supply alone, a 39 % reduction for limits to the water supply alone, and a 52 % reduction when both stresses were imposed simultaneously. There was no effect of N or water supply treatments on the leaf appearance rate on the main stem, a measure of the rate of progress toward flowering. Both N and water supplies had a strong effect on tillers/plant which, in turn, affected plant biomass and its constituent parts. The effects were independent, suggesting that, to accurately model the wheat canopy development when both mild N and water stresses are present, both stresses must be considered. A 'law of minimum' concept as currently used in the CERES-Wheat model would not be an accurate model for the process of tillering. In an experiment where stress was imposed during flowering and grain-filling, the grain yield/plant varied significantly with both N and water supplies. The interaction between N and water treatments on grain yield was also significant and was due primarily to their significant interaction on mean kernel weight. The major determinant of grain yield was tillers/plant at harvest. Both N and water supplies affected kernels/ear and N stress caused a reduction of 12% in both fertile spikelets/ear and kernels/fertile spikelet. At an optimum water supply, the difference between the effect of optimum and medium N supply on grain yield was not significant but yield in low N supply was reduced by 54%. In the medium water supply, the grain yield at both medium and low N treatments were significantly lower than at optimum N supply. There was no significant difference in yield between N supply treatments in the low water supply treatments. Thus, under severe water stress, a 'law of minimum' concept appeared to be valid, but under less severe stress both N and water supply affected grain yield. The data on leaf water potential and leaf temperature showed that plants in low water supply treatments maintained consistently lower leaf water potential and higher leaf temperature than in optimum water supply treatment. / Graduation date: 1993
4

Water stress and remobilization of dry matter and nitrogen in wheat and barley genotypes

Sarvestani, Zeinolabedin Tahmasebi. January 1996 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliography: leaves 223-247. Effects of water availability during grain filling is examined in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and barley (Hordum vulgare L.) genotypes. The study tests the accumulation of dry matter (DM) and nitrogen (N) in the grain and also their remobilization from the shoot to the grain. Water stress during grain filling was found to reduce DM and N accumulation and also to increase N concentration in both wheat and barley grain.
5

Water stress and remobilization of dry matter and nitrogen in wheat and barley genotypes / by Zeinolabedin Tahmasebi Sarvestani.

Sarvestani, Zeinolabedin Tahmasebi January 1995 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 223-247. / xiii, 247 p. : ill, maps ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Effects of water availability during grain filling is examined in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and barley (Hordum vulgare L.) genotypes. The study tests the accumulation of dry matter (DM) and nitrogen (N) in the grain and also their remobilization from the shoot to the grain. Water stress during grain filling was found to reduce DM and N accumulation and also to increase N concentration in both wheat and barley grain. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Plant Science, 1996

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