The rising atmospheric CO concentration ([CO ]) can increase crop productivity, but there are likely to be intraspecific variations in the response. To meet future world food demand, screening for genotypes with high [CO ] responsiveness will be a useful option, but there is no criterion for high [CO ] responsiveness. We hypothesized that the Finlay-Wilkinson regression coefficient (RC) (for the relationship between a genotype's yield versus the mean yield of all genotypes in a specific environment) could serve as a pre-screening criterion for identifying genotypes that respond strongly to elevated [CO ]. We collected datasets on the yield of 6 rice and 10 soybean genotypes along environmental gradients and compared their responsiveness to elevated [CO ] based on the regression coefficients (i.e. the increases of yield per 100 µmol mol [CO ]) identified in previous reports. We found significant positive correlations between the RCs and the responsiveness of yield to elevated [CO ] in both rice and soybean. This result raises the possibility that the coefficient of the Finlay-Wilkinson relationship could be used as a pre-screening criterion for [CO ] responsiveness.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12468 | DOI Listing |
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