Specific leaf area (SLA), the ratio of leaf area to leaf weight, is an important plant characteristic that affects the rate of dry matter production of crop canopies. It is affected by the conditions of growth of both isolated plants and crop communities, but the extent to which various environmental factors impact on SLA under field conditions is not clearly understood. This study was conducted to study the variability in SLA of leaves on the main culm, and in the leaf canopy as an entity, under different conditions of photoperiod, nitrogen and temperature for a number of wheat genotypes grown under field conditions. Five plantings at approximately bimonthly intervals on 12 May, 5 July and 22 September 1993; and on 9 June and 10 August 1994 were made under both natural photoperiod and an extended photoperiod of 20 h. A split plot design with two levels of nitrogen (0 kg N ha−1 and 150 kg N ha−1) as main plots and four genotypes of wheat comprising two spring types (Norseman and Roblin) and two winter types (Ruby and Harus) as subplots was used.SLA of individual leaves varied among leaf positions, but the pattern of variation was dependent on sowing date and genotype. For May and June sowing dates, SLA increased with leaf number up to leaf 5 and then declined with subsequent leaf numbers for the spring genotypes, but increased to leaf 5 and changed little thereafter for the winter types. For July or August sowing and for both spring and winter genotypes, the change in SLA with leaf position was less clear. The results further showed that some of this variability in SLA with leaf position could be accounted for by the mean air temperatures over which the leaves developed. As temperatures increased from 8 °C to 26 °C, SLA increased to a maximum value achieved at 18–20 °C and then declined. However, there was a large scatter of SLA values around 18–20 °C, due partly to some lower SLA values for the July and August sowing dates. This suggests the impact of other factors such as radiation and the degree of mutual shading within the canopy on SLA. Mean canopy SLA reflected the individual leaf values during the period of leaf production, and varied with sowing date and genotype, although the pattern of genotypic variability was inconsistent over sowing dates; it decreased rapidly after spike emergence presumably reflecting leaf aging. Neither nitrogen nor photoperiod had significant effects on SLA on both individual leaf and canopy bases.The results suggest that temperature is one factor affecting SLA under field conditions, but that further work to identify other factors impacting on SLA in the field will be necessary. For application of simulation models to situations in which temperatures are likely to vary, an accounting for the impact of temperature on the SLA of individual leaves would be desirable. Key words: Specific leaf area (SLA), sowing date, temperature, simulation, wheat
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