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Postponed and reduced basal nitrogen application improves nitrogen use efficiency and plant growth of winter wheat
TIAN Zhong-wei, LIU Xiao-xue, GU Shi-lu, YU Jin-hong, ZHANG Lei, ZHANG Wei-wei, JIANG Dong, CAO Wei-xing, DAI Ting-bo
2018, 17 (12): 2648-2661.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(18)62086-6
Abstract294)      PDF (1285KB)(716)      
Excessive nitrogen (N) fertilization with a high basal N ratio in wheat can result in lower N use efficiency (NUE) and has led to environmental problems in the Yangtze River Basin, China.  However, wheat requires less N fertilizer at seedling growth stage, and its basal N fertilizer utilization efficiency is relatively low; therefore, reducing the N application rate at the seedling stage and postponing the N fertilization period may be effective for reducing N application and increasing wheat yield and NUE.  A 4-year field experiment was conducted with two cultivars under four N rates (240 kg N ha–1 (N240),
180 kg N ha–1 (N180), 150 kg N ha–1 (N150), and 0 kg N ha–1 (N0)) and three basal N application stages (seeding (L0), four-leaf stage (L4), and six-leaf stage (L6)) to investigate the effects of reducing the basal N application rate and postponing the basal N fertilization period on grain yield, NUE, and N balance in a soil-wheat system.  There was no significant difference in grain yield between the N180L4 and N240L0 (control) treatments, and the maximum N recovery efficiency and N agronomy efficiency were observed in the N180L4 treatment.  Grain yield and NUE were the highest in the L4 treatment.  The leaf area index, flag leaf photosynthesis rate, flag leaf nitrate reductase and glutamine synthase activities, dry matter accumulation, and N uptake post-jointing under N180L4 did not differ significantly from those under N240L0.  Reduced N application decreased the inorganic N content in the 0–60-cm soil layer, and the inorganic N content of the L6 treatment was higher than those of the L0 and L4 treatments at the same N level.  Surplus N was low under the reduced N rates and delayed basal N application treatments.  Therefore, postponing and reducing basal N fertilization could maintain a high yield and improve NUE by improving the photosynthetic production capacity, promoting N uptake and assimilation, and reducing surplus N in soil-wheat systems.
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Priming: A promising strategy for crop production in response to future climate
WANG Xiao, LIU Fu-lai, JIANG Dong
2017, 16 (12): 2709-2716.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(17)61786-6
Abstract884)      PDF (579KB)(140)      
Anticipated more frequent extreme events due to changes in global climatic variability requires adaptation of crop species to multi-occurrence abiotic stresses hereby sustaining the food security.  Priming, by pre-exposure of plants to an eliciting factor, enables plants to be more tolerant to later biotic or abiotic stress events.  Priming induced “stress memory” exists in both present generation and the offspring.  Thus, priming is suggested to be a promising strategy for plants to cope with the abiotic stresses under global change scenarios.  In this review, the underlying physiological and molecular mechanisms of priming induced enhancement of stress tolerance to the major abiotic stresses of drought and waterlogging, and high and low temperature in crop plants were discussed, and the potential to utilize the priming effect for sustaining crop productivity in future climates was also suggested.
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Isolation, identification, derivatization and phytotoxic activity of secondary metabolites produced by Cladosporium oxysporum DH14, a locust-associated fungus
LU Yi-hui, LI Shuai, SHAO Ming-wei, XIAO Xiao-hui, KONG Li-chun, JIANG Dong-hua, ZHANG Ying-lao
2016, 15 (4): 832-839.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(15)61145-5
Abstract1975)      PDF in ScienceDirect      
Three main phytotoxic compounds including lunatoic acid A (1), 5Z-7-oxozeaenol (2) and zeaenol (3) were isolated from the fermentation broth of Cladosporium oxysporum DH14, a fungus residing in the locust (Oxya chinensis ) gut.  Two additional derivative compounds, compound 1a and 1b, were synthesized by methylation and chlorination of compound 1, respectively.  The structures of such compounds were identified on the basis of spectroscopic analysis and by comparison of the corresponding data to those previously reported in the literature.  Compounds 1–3 exhibited significantly phytotoxic activities against the radicle growth of Amaranthus retroflexus L. with the 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50 values) of 4.51, 4.80 and 8.16 μg mL–1, respectively, which is comparable to that positive control 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (IC50=1.95 μg mL–1).  Furthermore, the compound 1 showed selective phytotoxic activity with the inhibition rate of less than 22% against the crops of Brassica rapa L., Sorghum durra, Brassica campestris L., Capsicum annucm and Raphanus sativus L. under the concentration of 100 μg mL–1.  Both derivatives of compound 1 had moderate phytotoxic activity against the radicle growth of A. retroflexus L.  The findings of our present study suggest that these compounds provide new promising candidates for the potential management strategies of weeds.
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