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Water use of tall and dwarf crop plants
J. Giles Waines, University of California, Riverside
Bahman Ehdaie, University of California, Riverside
UC Water Resources Center Technical Completion Report no. 788
ABSTRACT: The recurrent California drought necessitates investigation of the relationship between
water application, crop yields, and management practices. The majority of cultivars in many
crops are genetically dwarfed which allows the application of larger amounts of water and
fertilizer in return for higher yields and ease of harvesting. This project used bread wheat as
a model system to investigate the water use and water-use efficiency of taIl and dwarf
cultivars. Four near-isogenic lines, rhtrht (tall), RhtlRhtl (semidwarf), Rht2Rht2
(semidwarf), and Rht3Rht3 (dwarf), in 'Maringa' bread wheat background and four of their
near-isogenic Fl hybrids derived from crossing the original lines were used to determine the
effects of dwarfing genes on plant height, water use, grain yield, total dry matter, and wateruse
efficiency in well-watered and droughted pot experiments in the glasshouse. The nearisogenic
lines and their six F 1 hybrids were also grown in well-watered and droughted field
conditions. The glasshouse season lasted 158 days, whereas the field season took 149 days
between planting and harvesting. Carbon isotope discrimination was determined as a
measure of transpiration efficiency. The near-isogenic lines used similar amounts of water in
well-watered (12 kg per 158 days) and droughted (9 kg per 158 days) pot experiments. The
Rht3Rht3 dwarf line actually used 3% less water than the tall line in a well-watered situation,
and 5% less water than tall line in a droughted situation, but these differences were not
significant in this experiment. Plant height ranged from 60 to 124 em and from 53 to 121
ern in well-watered and droughted pot experiments, and it varied from 50 to 94 cm and from
49 to 90 cm in well-watered and droughted field experiments, respectively. Total dry matter,
grain yield, transpiration efficiency (total dry matter/water used), and water-use efficiency
(grain yield/water used) declined with plant height in well-watered glasshouse conditions.
No significant relationships were found between plant height and these traits in droughted
glasshouse conditions. Carbon isotope discrimination was negatively correlated with
transpiration efficiency, but significantly so only in well-watered pot experiments. Plant
height was negatively associated with carbon isotope discrimination in both well-watered and
droughted pot and field experiments. Grain yield and aboveground dry matter also declined
with plant height in field conditions. In most cases, the dwarfing genes reduced shoot dry
matter more than grain yield, therefore, harvest index of the semidwarf and dwarf lines was
higher than that of the tall standard line. The dwarfism caused by Rhtl, Rht2, and Rht3
genes had, in general, depressing effects on transpiration efficiency, water-use efficiency,
total dry matter, and grain yield. An optimum range for plant height was determined (90-
100 ern) using these near-isogenic lines, below which shoot dry matter, grain yield, and
water-use efficiency were significantly reduced.
SUGGESTED CITATION: J. Giles Waines and Bahman Ehdaie,
"Water use of tall and dwarf crop plants"
(October 1, 1994).
University of California Water Resources Center.
Technical Completion Reports.
Paper 788_waines.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/wrc/tcr/788_waines
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