Ahmed, Mukhtar
- Department of Agricultural Research for Northern Sweden, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- Pir Mehr Ali Shah Arid Agriculture University
Research article2021Peer reviewedOpen access
Rehman, Hafeez Ur; Tariq, Absaar; Ashraf, Imran; Ahmed, Mukhtar; Muscolo, Adele; Basra, Shahzad M. A.; Reynolds, Matthew
Wheat crop experiences high temperature stress during flowering and grain-filling stages, which is termed as "terminal heat stress". Characterizing genotypes for adaptive traits could increase their selection for better performance under terminal heat stress. The present study evaluated the morpho-physiological traits of two spring wheat cultivars (Millet-11, Punjab-11) and two advanced lines (V-07096, V-10110) exposed to terminal heat stress under late sowing. Early maturing Millet-11 was used as heat-tolerant control. Late sowing reduced spike length (13%), number of grains per spike (10%), 1000-grain weight (13%) and biological yield (15-20%) compared to timely sowing. Nonetheless, higher number of productive tillers per plant (19-20%) and grain yield (9%) were recorded under late sowing. Advanced lines and genotype Punjab-11 had delayed maturity and better agronomic performance than early maturing heat-tolerant Millet-11. Advanced lines expressed reduced canopy temperature during grain filling and high leaf chlorophyll a (20%) and b (71-125%) contents during anthesis under late sowing. All wheat genotypes expressed improved stem water-soluble carbohydrates under terminal heat stress that were highest for heat-tolerant Millet-11 genotype during anthesis. Improved grain yield was associated with the highest chlorophyll contents showing stay green characteristics with maintenance of high photosynthetic rates and cooler canopies under late sowing. The results revealed that advanced lines and Punjab-11 with heat adaptive traits could be promising source for further use in the selection of heat-tolerant wheat genotypes.
canopy temperature; water soluble carbohydrates; heat stress; stay green; seed yield
Plants
2021, Volume: 10, number: 3, article number: 455Publisher: MDPI
Agricultural Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10030455
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/111625