Abstract

The data set reported here includes the part of a Hot Serial Cereal Experiment (HSC) experiment recently used in the AgMIP-Wheat project to analyze the uncertainty of 30 wheat models and quantify their response to temperature. The HSC experiment was conducted in an open-field in a semiarid environment in the southwest USA. The data reported herewith include one hard red spring wheat cultivar (Yecora Rojo) sown approximately every six weeks from December to August for a two-year period for a total of 11 planting dates out of the 15 of the entire HSC experiment. The treatments were chosen to avoid any effect of frost on grain yields. On late fall, winter and early spring plantings temperature free-air controlled enhancement (T-FACE) apparatus utilizing infrared heaters with supplemental irrigation were used to increase air temperature by 1.3°C/2.7°C (day/night) with conditions equivalent to raising air temperature at constant relative humidity (i.e. as expected with global warming) during the whole crop growth cycle. Experimental data include local daily weather data, soil characteristics and initial conditions, detailed crop measurements taken at three growth stages during the growth cycle, and cultivar information. Simulations include both daily in-season and end-of-season results from 30 wheat models. Data access via doi 10.7910/DVN/M9ZT0F

Highlights

  • The dataset reported here includes the part of a Hot Serial Cereal Experiment (HSC) experiment recently used in the AgMIP-Wheat project to analyze the uncertainty of 30 wheat models and quantify their response to temperature

  • The HSC experiment was conducted in an open-field in a semiarid environment in the southwest USA

  • The field experimental data were from the Hot Serial Cereal (HSC) experiment carried out by the USDA Arid-Land Agricultural Research Center and the University of Arizona at Maricopa, Arizona to investigate the response of wheat development (White et al, 2011, 2012), gas exchange (Wall et al, 2011), growth, grain yield (Ottman et al, 2012;), canopy temperature and energy balance (Grant et al, 2011; Kimball et al, 2012) to supplemental heating and to seasonal air temperature from varied planting dates

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Summary

Introduction

The data reported include one hard red spring wheat cultivar (Yecora Rojo) sown approximately every six weeks from December to August for a twoyear period for a total of 11 planting dates out of the 15 of the entire HSC experiment. The field experimental data were from the Hot Serial Cereal (HSC) experiment carried out by the USDA Arid-Land Agricultural Research Center and the University of Arizona at Maricopa, Arizona to investigate the response of wheat development (White et al, 2011, 2012), gas exchange (Wall et al, 2011), growth, grain yield (Ottman et al, 2012;), canopy temperature and energy balance (Grant et al, 2011; Kimball et al, 2012) to supplemental heating and to seasonal air temperature from varied planting dates.

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