| Literature DB >> 30449058 |
Yu Jiang1,2,3, Haoyu Qian1, Ling Wang4, Jinfei Feng5, Shan Huang6, Bruce A Hungate7, Chris van Kessel8, William R Horwath9, Xingyue Zhang9, Xiaobo Qin10, Yue Li10, Xiaomin Feng1, Jun Zhang1, Aixing Deng1, Chenyan Zheng1, Zhenwei Song1, Shuijin Hu11,12, Kees Jan van Groenigen2, Weijian Zhang1.
Abstract
Rice is a staple food for nearly half of the world's population, but rice paddies constitute a major source of anthropogenic CH4 emissions. Root exudates from growing rice plants are an important substrate for methane-producing microorganisms. Therefore, breeding efforts optimizing rice plant photosynthate allocation to grains, i.e., increasing harvest index (HI), are widely expected to reduce CH4 emissions with higher yield. Here we show, by combining a series of experiments, meta-analyses and an expert survey, that the potential of CH4 mitigation from rice paddies through HI improvement is in fact small. Whereas HI improvement reduced CH4 emissions under continuously flooded (CF) irrigation, it did not affect CH4 emissions in systems with intermittent irrigation (II). We estimate that future plant breeding efforts aimed at HI improvement to the theoretical maximum value will reduce CH4 emissions in CF systems by 4.4%. However, CF systems currently make up only a small fraction of the total rice growing area (i.e., 27% of the Chinese rice paddy area). Thus, to achieve substantial CH4 mitigation from rice agriculture, alternative plant breeding strategies may be needed, along with alternative management.Entities:
Keywords: climate change; food security; greenhouse gases; meta-analysis; water management
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30449058 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863