Abstract

There is concern over the impact of global warming on rice production due increased heat stress, coupled with decreased relative humidity (RH). It is unknown how rice yield and quality are affected by heat stress and decreased RH during the grain filling stage. We conducted experiments in controlled growth chambers on six rice cultivars, varying in heat tolerance using 12 combinative treatments of three factors: two RH levels (75% and 85%), three temperature levels (the daily maximum temperature at 33 °C, 35 °C, and 37 °C), and two durations (8 d and 15 d after anthesis). Results showed that RH75% with temperature treatments significantly reduced grain weight, which was higher than RH85%. The same trend was also observed for both head rice rate and chalkiness. R168 was the most heat-tolerant cultivar, but it still had some differences in grain weight, head rice rate, and chalkiness between the two RH regimes. The lower RH was most detrimental at 35 °C, and to a lesser extent at 33 °C, but had a negligible effect at 37 °C. Our results provide a better understanding of temperature and RH’s interaction effects on rice quality during the grain filling stage, suggesting that RH should be considered in heat tolerance screening and identification to facilitate rice breeding and genetic improvement.

Highlights

  • The average global surface temperature has risen by an estimated 0.85 C from 1880–2012 (Stocker et al, 2013)

  • Oya & Yoshida (2008) found a clear difference in chalky formation among varieties with wind treatments. It is not well understood how rice yield and quality are affected by heat stress coupled with different relative humidity (RH) during the grain filling stage

  • Grain weight The effects of temperature, RH, and temperature × RH on grain weight were significant among six cultivars (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The average global surface temperature has risen by an estimated 0.85 C from 1880–2012 (Stocker et al, 2013). The limitations of soil moisture, water supply, and crop transpiration cause a decrease in the near-surface relative humidity (RH) over land. Most land types, except coastal areas, will become drier (Byrne & O’Gorman, 2016; Dai, Zhao & Chen, 2018; Orimoloye et al, 2018; Po-Chedley et al, 2018). Rice is one of the most important staple cereals, providing food for more than half of the world’s population (Seck et al, 2012). Rice yields fluctuate considerably and are susceptible to climate change (Jagadish, Murty & Quick, 2015; Yan et al, 2017)

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