Abstract

Summary.Elevated CO2 (691 cf. 371 /miol CO2 mol‐1 air) and warmer temperatures (over the range 1.0UC below to 1.6oC above ambient) increased light interception by crops of two contrasting cultivars (Hereward and Soissons) of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) during winter growth in the field. The fractional interception of light by the canopy increased more rapidly initially in Soissons than in Hereward, but Hereward showed a much greater response to CO2 (35% increase in Hereward but only 7% in Soissons) at 500oCd after sowing. By terminal spikelet formation, in contrast, fractional interception was greater in Hereward than in Soissons, while the effect of CO2 was the same in both cultivars (9%). Thus, although differences in the relative response of canopy development to CO2 were detected between cultivars initially, differences were negligible during later development. The greater interception of light by the canopy in elevated CO2, at any one temperature, resulted from increased tillering. The number of tillers plant“‘ at terminal spikelet was a linear function of main stem dry mass at this developmental stage but with a greater response in elevated CO2, viz 2.3 and 3.8 tillers g‐1 main stem dry mass at 371 and 691 /μmol CO2 mol‐1 air, respectively; these relations were unaffected by cultivar.

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