Abstract

BackgroundA number of field studies have demonstrated that the yield potential of hybrid rice cultivars is higher than that of inbred cultivars, although the magnitude of difference between hybrid and inbred cultivars at different yield levels has not been described. The objective of this study is to compare the yield increase potential at different yield levels between hybrid and conventional rice. Ten field experiments were conducted at five locations in southern China in 2012 and 2013. At each location, two hybrid and two inbred cultivars were grown at three N levels: high (225 kg/hm2), moderate (161–191 kg/hm2) and the control, zero N (0 kg/hm2).ResultsHybrid rice yielded approximately 8 % more grain than did inbred cultivars in Huaiji, Binyang and Haikou; approximately 7 % more in Changsha; and approximately 19 % more in Xingyi. The high grain yields observed for hybrid rice cultivars were attributed to high grain weight and biomass accumulation at maturity. On average, rice yields were approximately 6.0–7.5 t ha−1 (medium yield) in Huaiji, Binyang and Haikou; approximately 9.0 t ha−1 in Changsha (high yield); and approximately 12.0 t ha−1 (super high yield) in Xingyi. The yield gaps among Huaiji, Binyang and Haikou and Changsha were attributed to the differences in spikelets m−2 and biomass production, whereas the yield gap between Changsha and Xingyi was caused by the differences in grain-filling percentage, grain weight and harvest index. The differences in biomass production among sites were primarily due to variation in crop growth rate induced by varied temperatures and accumulative solar radiation.ConclusionsThe yield superiority of hybrid rice was relatively small in comparison with that of inbred cultivars at medium and high yield levels, but the difference was large at super high yield levels. Improving rice yields from medium to high should focus on spikelets m−2 and biomass, whereas further improvement to super high level should emphasize on grain-filling percentage, grain weight and harvest index. Favorable environmental conditions are essential for high yields in hybrid rice.

Highlights

  • A number of field studies have demonstrated that the yield potential of hybrid rice cultivars is higher than that of inbred cultivars, the magnitude of difference between hybrid and inbred cultivars at different yield levels has not been described

  • The differences in grain yield among the cultivars were significant in all ten experiments, the magnitude of the differences in grain yield between the hybrid and inbred rice varied by site

  • The high grain yields observed for hybrid rice cultivars were attributed to high grain weight and biomass accumulation at maturity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A number of field studies have demonstrated that the yield potential of hybrid rice cultivars is higher than that of inbred cultivars, the magnitude of difference between hybrid and inbred cultivars at different yield levels has not been described. Katsura et al (2008) and Li et al (2009) found that intense incident solar radiation coupled with low nighttime temperatures was the key environmental factor for the high grain yield of irrigated rice in Taoyuan These results indicated that the environment plays an important role in rice yield. These previous studies primarily focused on the differences in grain yield between a high-yielding site and a check site; little attention, has been paid to the magnitude of differences in grain yield between hybrid rice and inbred cultivars at different yield levels. The differences between different sites in tropical and subtropical environments have been poorly studied

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.