| Literature DB >> 28706531 |
Shah Fahad1, Ali A Bajwa2, Usman Nazir3, Shakeel A Anjum3, Ayesha Farooq3, Ali Zohaib3, Sehrish Sadia4, Wajid Nasim5, Steve Adkins2, Shah Saud6,7, Muhammad Z Ihsan8,9, Hesham Alharby10, Chao Wu1, Depeng Wang11, Jianliang Huang1,12.
Abstract
Abiotic stresses are one of the major constraints to crop production and food security worldwide. The situation has aggravated due to the drastic and rapid changes in global climate. Heat and drought are undoubtedly the two most important stresses having huge impact on growth and productivity of the crops. It is very important to understand the physiological, biochemical, and ecological interventions related to these stresses for better management. A wide range of plant responses to these stresses could be generalized into morphological, physiological, and biochemical responses. Interestingly, this review provides a detailed account of plant responses to heat and drought stresses with special focus on highlighting the commonalities and differences. Crop growth and yields are negatively affected by sub-optimal water supply and abnormal temperatures due to physical damages, physiological disruptions, and biochemical changes. Both these stresses have multi-lateral impacts and therefore, complex in mechanistic action. A better understanding of plant responses to these stresses has pragmatic implication for remedies and management. A comprehensive account of conventional as well as modern approaches to deal with heat and drought stresses have also been presented here. A side-by-side critical discussion on salient responses and management strategies for these two important abiotic stresses provides a unique insight into the phenomena. A holistic approach taking into account the different management options to deal with heat and drought stress simultaneously could be a win-win approach in future.Entities:
Keywords: climate change; crop production; drought; heat stress; plant responses; stress management
Year: 2017 PMID: 28706531 PMCID: PMC5489704 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.01147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Yield losses in some major crops caused by drought and heat stress.
| Crop species | Stress | Yield losses (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maize ( | Drought | 63–87 | |
| Heat | 42 | ||
| Wheat ( | Drought | 57 | |
| Heat | 31 | ||
| Rice ( | Drought | 53–92 | |
| Heat | 50 | ||
| Chickpea ( | Drought | 45–69 | |
| Soybean ( | Drought | 46–71 | |
| Sunflower ( | Drought | 60 |
Effect of drought and heat stress on crop nutrients.
| Stress | Process affected | Nutrient loss |
|---|---|---|
| Drought | Soil integrity by erosion | Loss of all mineral nutrients |
| Drought and heat | Transpiration driven mass flow | Mobile nutrients such as Ca, Mg, Si, nitrates, and sulfates |
| Drought and heat | Root growth | Almost all nutrients especially P and K |
| Drought and heat | Biological nitrogen fixation | N |
| Drought and heat | Soil microbial activity | N |
| Heat | Plant phenology | N, P, K |
| Heat | Nitrate reductase activity | N |
Activity of photosynthetic enzymes in some field crops as influenced by drought and heat stress.
| Crop | Stress | Enzyme | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alfalfa ( | Drought | Rubisco | Unchanged | |
| Tobacco ( | Drought | Rubisco | Reduced | |
| Heat | Rubisco | Reduced | ||
| Maize ( | Drought | PEPCase | Increased | |
| Heat | Rubisco-activase | Reduced | ||
| Sugarcane ( | Drought | Phosphoenol pyruvate | Reduced | |
| carboxylase (PEPCase), PPDK | ||||
| Cotton ( | Heat | Rubisco | Reduced | |
| Wheat ( | Heat | Rubisco | Reduced |
Drought tolerant cultivars of some important field crops developed by different research institutes through conventional breeding.
| Research Institute | Crop | Cultivar/line | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) | Common beans | SEA-5 | |
| Common beans | SEA-13 | ||
| Common beans | A-195 | ||
| International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) | Chickpea | Flip 87-59C | |
| Barley | Giza-126 | ||
| International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) | Peanut | ICGV-87354 | |
| Montana Agricultural Research Station, United States | Wheat | Willow Creek | |
| Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station, United States | Wheat | Ripper | |
| Wheat | Prairie Red | ||
| Nebraska Agricultural Experimental Station, United States | Wheat | NE01643 | |
| Agricultural Research Station, Giza, Egypt | Barley | Giza-2000 | |
| International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) | Maize | 16 inbred lines |
Desirable plant traits for heat tolerance.
| Trait | Reference |
|---|---|
| Canopy temperature depression | |
| Thylakoid membrane stability | |
| Ability to stay green | |
| Waxy leaves | |
| Chlorophyll content | |
| Stomatal conductance | |
| Photosynthetic rate | |
| Grain filling duration | |
| Better fruit setting | |
| Grain yield |