| Literature DB >> 27223810 |
Stefani Daryanto1, Lixin Wang1, Pierre-André Jacinthe1.
Abstract
Drought has been a major cause of agricultural disaster, yet how it affects the vulnerability of maize and wheat production in combination with several co-varying factors (i.e., phenological phases, agro-climatic regions, soil texture) remains unclear. Using a data synthesis approach, this study aims to better characterize the effects of those co-varying factors with drought and to provide critical information on minimizing yield loss. We collected data from peer-reviewed publications between 1980 and 2015 which examined maize and wheat yield responses to drought using field experiments. We performed unweighted analysis using the log response ratio to calculate the bootstrapped confidence limits of yield responses and calculated drought sensitivities with regards to those co-varying factors. Our results showed that yield reduction varied with species, with wheat having lower yield reduction (20.6%) compared to maize (39.3%) at approximately 40% water reduction. Maize was also more sensitive to drought than wheat, particularly during reproductive phase and equally sensitive in the dryland and non-dryland regions. While no yield difference was observed among regions or different soil texture, wheat cultivation in the dryland was more prone to yield loss than in the non-dryland region. Informed by these results, we discuss potential causes and possible approaches that may minimize drought impacts.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27223810 PMCID: PMC4880198 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
World production and top producers of different cereal crops [3].
| Common name | Scientific name | Production in tons (x106) in 2013 | Top producers in descending order, averaged from 1993 to 2013 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 713.2 (25.65%) | China, India, USA, Russia | ||
| Common wheat, bread wheat | |||
| Durum wheat | |||
| Spelt | |||
| Oryza spp. | 745.7 (26.82%) | China, India, Indonesia, Bangladesh | |
| Rice, paddy | |||
| 144. 7 (5.20%) | Russia, Germany, Canada, France, Ukraine | ||
| Four-row barley | |||
| Two-row barley | |||
| Six-row barley | |||
| 1,016.7 (36.56%) | China, USA, Brazil, Mexico | ||
| Corn, Indian corn, mealies | |||
| Pop corn | |||
| 16.7 (0.6%) | Russia, Poland, Germany, Belarus, Ukraine | ||
| 23.8 (0.86%) | Russia, Canada, USA, Poland, Australia | ||
| 29.9 (1.07%) | India, Nigeria, China, Niger | ||
| Pearl, cattail millet | |||
| Proso, common, golden millet | |||
| Barnyard, Japanese millet | |||
| African millet, finger | |||
| Ditch millet, koda | |||
| Foxtail millet | |||
| 61.4 (2.21%) | USA, India, Nigeria, Mexico, Sudan (former) | ||
| Common, milo, feterita, kaffir corn | |||
| Guinea corn | |||
| Durra, juwar, kaoliang | |||
| 2.55 (0.10%) | China, Russia, Ukraine, France | ||
| 0.10 (0.004%) | Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador | ||
| 0.58 (0.20%) | Guinea, Nigeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire | ||
| Fonio, findi | |||
| Black fonio, hungry rice | |||
| 14.6 (0.52%) | China, USA, Turkey, Vietnam | ||
| 6.4 (0.23%) | Ethiopia, Chad, Austria, Thailand, Kazakhstan | ||
| Canagua or coaihua | |||
| Quihuicha, Inca wheat | |||
| Wild rice |
*number in parentheses are percentage of total cereal production
Fig 1Distribution of the locations of all the studies used in this synthesis.
The map was generated using ArcGIS 10.0 (ESRI, Redlands, CA).
Fig 2Observed yield reduction (A) resulting from meta-analysis and their corresponding water reduction (B) for maize and wheat. Letters a and b indicate significant difference between observed water reduction level and n indicates the number of samples for each category variable that has observable water reduction.
Fig 3Drought sensitivity of wheat (A) and maize (B), 95% confidence intervals of drought sensitivity of maize and wheat (C). Dotted lines indicate 95% prediction band.
Fig 4Observed yield reduction (A) resulting from meta-analysis and their corresponding water reduction (B) for maize and wheat at different phenological phases. Letters a, b and c indicate significant difference between observed water reduction level and n indicates the number of samples for each category that has observable water reduction.
Fig 5Drought sensitivity of maize and wheat at different phenological phases (A-D) and 95% confidence interval of drought sensitivity of maize and wheat experiencing drought at different phenological phases (E). Dotted lines indicate 95% prediction band.