Srinivasan Venkatraman, Kumar Praveen, Long Stephen P
The Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2017 Apr;23(4):1626-1635. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13526. Epub 2016 Nov 17.
Without new innovations, present rates of increase in yields of food crops globally are inadequate to meet the projected rising food demand for 2050 and beyond. A prevailing response of crops to rising [CO ] is an increase in leaf area. This is especially marked in soybean, the world's fourth largest food crop in terms of seed production, and the most important vegetable protein source. Is this increase in leaf area beneficial, with respect to increasing yield, or is it detrimental? It is shown from theory and experiment using open-air whole-season elevation of atmospheric [CO ] that it is detrimental not only under future conditions of elevated [CO ] but also under today's [CO ]. A mechanistic biophysical and biochemical model of canopy carbon exchange and microclimate (MLCan) was parameterized for a modern US Midwest soybean cultivar. Model simulations showed that soybean crops grown under current and elevated (550 [ppm]) [CO ] overinvest in leaves, and this is predicted to decrease productivity and seed yield 8% and 10%, respectively. This prediction was tested in replicated field trials in which a proportion of emerging leaves was removed prior to expansion, so lowering investment in leaves. The experiment was conducted under open-air conditions for current and future elevated [CO ] within the Soybean Free Air Concentration Enrichment facility (SoyFACE) in central Illinois. This treatment resulted in a statistically significant 8% yield increase. This is the first direct proof that a modern crop cultivar produces more leaf than is optimal for yield under today's and future [CO ] and that reducing leaf area would give higher yields. Breeding or bioengineering for lower leaf area could, therefore, contribute very significantly to meeting future demand for staple food crops given that an 8% yield increase across the USA alone would amount to 6.5 million metric tons annually.
如果没有新的创新,全球粮食作物目前的增产速度将不足以满足预计的2050年及以后不断增长的粮食需求。作物对大气中[CO₂]上升的普遍反应是叶面积增加。这在大豆中尤为明显,大豆按种子产量计是世界第四大粮食作物,也是最重要的植物蛋白来源。就提高产量而言,叶面积的这种增加是有益的还是有害的呢?通过在露天条件下进行的为期一整个生长季的大气[CO₂]浓度升高试验,从理论和实验上都表明,叶面积增加不仅在未来大气[CO₂]浓度升高的条件下是有害的,在当今的[CO₂]浓度条件下也是有害的。针对美国中西部一个现代大豆品种,对冠层碳交换和小气候(MLCan)的机械生物物理和生化模型进行了参数化。模型模拟表明,在当前和升高(550 [ppm])的[CO₂]浓度下种植的大豆作物对叶片投入过多,预计这将分别使生产力和种子产量降低8%和10%。这一预测在重复的田间试验中得到了验证,在试验中,在叶片展开前去除了一部分新出的叶片,从而减少了对叶片的投入。该试验是在伊利诺伊州中部的大豆自由空气浓度富集设施(SoyFACE)内露天条件下,针对当前和未来升高的[CO₂]浓度进行的。这种处理使产量在统计学上显著提高了8%。这是首个直接证据,证明现代作物品种在当今和未来的[CO₂]浓度条件下产生的叶片多于产量最优所需的叶片数量,并且减少叶面积会带来更高的产量。因此,鉴于仅在美国产量提高8%就相当于每年增产650万吨,培育叶面积较小的品种或通过生物工程手段减少叶面积,对于满足未来主食作物的需求可能会做出非常重要的贡献。