Micrometeorological Comparison of Canopy Temperature between Two Wheat Cultivars Grown under Irrigation in a Hot Environment in Sudan

AGRONOMY-BASEL(2023)

Cited 0|Views3
No score
Abstract
A thorough exploration of the micrometeorological aspects influencing canopy temperature in contrasting wheat cultivars can unveil the specific mechanisms of adaptation to heat stress. However, information on wheat microclimates in hot environments for crop improvement is lacking. Here, we used a micrometeorological method to investigate wheat's response to high temperatures. Field experiments were conducted in the Gezira Scheme, Sudan, to compare two high-yielding heat-tolerant cultivars, Imam and Bohaine, in terms of canopy temperature depression (CTD), air temperature gradient (ATG), and vapor pressure gradient (VPG) from a 2 m height to canopy level. The maximum air temperature at 2 m during the main growing season was 37 degrees C. Air temperature at canopy level was mostly lower in the Imam field than in the Bohaine field, and it was positively correlated with and higher than radiometric canopy surface temperature. The maximum CTD during the reproductive stage was 4.7-6.5 degrees C in the Bohaine field and 5.0-7.2 degrees C in the Imam field. ATG was also larger in the Imam field, attributed to the greater leaf area of the Imam canopy, as presumed from the NDVI difference between fields. ATG was negatively correlated with VPG in both fields, and the relationship was stronger at lower nighttime wind speeds and weaker at higher daytime wind speeds. These results indicate that the micrometeorological approach can be used to compare cultivars in high-temperature environments.
More
Translated text
Key words
arid region,dry season,microclimate,temperature depression,vapor pressure
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined