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Evidence for increasing global wheat yield potential
Date Issued
2022-12-12
Author(s)
Guarin, Jose Rafael
Martre, Pierre
Ewert, Frank
Webber, Heidi
Dueri, Sibylle
Calderini, Daniel
Reynolds, Matthew
Molero, Gemma
Miralles, Daniel
Garcia, Guillermo
Slafer, Gustavo
Giunta, Francesco
Pequeno, Diego N. L.
Stella, Tommaso
Ahmed, Mukhtar
Alderman, Phillip D.
Basso, Bruno
Berger, Andres G.
Bindi, Marco
Bracho-Mujica, Gennady
Cammarano, Davide
Chen, Yi
Dumont, Benjamin
Rezaei, Ehsan Eyshi
Fereres, Elias
Ferrise, Roberto
Gaiser, Thomas
Gao, Yujing
Garcia-Vila, Margarita
Gayler, Sebastian
Hochman, Zvi
Hoogenboom, Gerrit
Hunt, Leslie A.
Nendel, Claas
Olesen, Jørgen E.
Palosuo, Taru
Priesack, Eckart
Pullens, Johannes W. M.
Rodríguez, Alfredo
Rötter, Reimund P.
Ramos, Margarita Ruiz
Semenov, Mikhail A.
Senapati, Nimai
Srivastava, Amit Kumar
Stöckle, Claudio
Supit, Iwan
Tao, Fulu
Thorburn, Peter
Wang, Enli
Weber, Tobias Karl David
Xiao, Liujun
Zhang, Zhao
Zhao, Chuang
Zhao, Jin
Zhao, Zhigan
Zhu, Yan
Asseng, Senthold
DOI
10.1088/1748-9326/aca77c
Abstract
AbstractWheat is the most widely grown food crop, with 761 Mt produced globally in 2020. To meet the expected grain demand by mid-century, wheat breeding strategies must continue to improve upon yield-advancing physiological traits, regardless of climate change impacts. Here, the best performing doubled haploid (DH) crosses with an increased canopy photosynthesis from wheat field experiments in the literature were extrapolated to the global scale with a multi-model ensemble of process-based wheat crop models to estimate global wheat production. The DH field experiments were also used to determine a quantitative relationship between wheat production and solar radiation to estimate genetic yield potential. The multi-model ensemble projected a global annual wheat production of 1050 ± 145 Mt due to the improved canopy photosynthesis, a 37% increase, without expanding cropping area. Achieving this genetic yield potential would meet the lower estimate of the projected grain demand in 2050, albeit with considerable challenges.
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