Abstract

Plant breeding has increased the yield of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) over decades, and the rate of genetic gain has been faster under high fertility in some countries. However, this response is not universal, and limited information exists on the physiological traits underlying the interaction between varieties and fertilization. Thus, our objectives were to identify the key shifts in crop phenotype in response to selection for yield and quality, and to determine whether historical and modern winter wheat varieties respond differently to in-furrow fertilizer. Factorial field experiments combined eight winter wheat varieties released between 1920 and 2016, and two fertilizer practices [control versus 112 kg ha-1 in-furrow 12 -40-0-10-1 (N-P-K-S-Zn)] in four Kansas environments. Grain yield and grain N-removal increased nonlinearly with year of release, with greater increases between 1966 and 2000. In-furrow fertilizer increased yield by ~300 kg ha-1 with no variety × fertility interaction. Grain protein concentration related negatively to yield, and the residuals of this relationship were unrelated to year of release. Yield increase was associated with changes in thermal time to critical growth stages, as modern varieties had shorter vegetative period and longer grain filling period. Yield gains also derived from more kernels m-2 resultant from more kernels head-1. Historical varieties were taller, had thinner stems, and allocated more biomass to the stem than semidwarf varieties. Yield gains resulted from increases in harvest index and not in biomass accumulation at grain filling and maturity, as shoot biomass was similar among varieties. The allometric exponent (i.e., the slope between log of organ biomass and log of shoot biomass) for grain increased with, and for leaves was unrelated to, year of release. The ability of modern varieties to allocate more biomass to the kernels coupled to an early maturity increased grain yield and grain N-removal over time. However, increases in grain yield were greater than increases in grain N-removal, reducing grain protein concentration in modern varieties.

Highlights

  • Global wheat production often surpasses 750 Mt harvested from about 220 Mha, with an average yield of 3.4 Mg ha-1 (FAOSTAT, 2018)

  • We evaluated the effects of in-furrow fertilization on grain yield, yield components, and biomass accumulation and partitioning in a set of historical and modern commercial wheat varieties adapted to Kansas, USA

  • Kansas winter wheat varieties increased grain yield over time, but there was a decrease on the pace of progress after 1990s

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Summary

Introduction

Global wheat production often surpasses 750 Mt harvested from about 220 Mha, with an average yield of 3.4 Mg ha-1 (FAOSTAT, 2018). The development of semidwarf wheat varieties (Evenson, 2003) coupled with N fertilizer was responsible for large proportion of the yield advances over decades (Bell et al, 1995). For irrigated spring wheat in Mexico, genetic improvement accounted for 28% and increased use of N fertilizers for 48% of the yield improvement between 1968 and 1990 (Bell et al, 1995). Some studies showed that rates of yield gain can differ over time, and have typically decreased in recent years. The genetic gain in wheat decreased or was nonsignificant in recent years in Spain, Brazil, and Argentina (Acreche et al, 2008; Beche et al, 2014; Lo Valvo et al, 2017)

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