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Academic & Professional Books  Environmental & Social Studies  Natural Resource Use & Depletion  Agriculture & Food

The Physiology of Crop Yield

By: RKM Hay and JR Porter
314 pages, illus
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
The Physiology of Crop Yield
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  • The Physiology of Crop Yield ISBN: 9781405108591 Edition: 2 Paperback Sep 2006 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £75.95
    #154309
Price: £75.95
About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

The first edition of this successful book published in 1989 was the first student text to digest and assimilate the many advances in crop physiology. This long awaited second edition continues to be an essential tool for students in agricultural and plant sciences, with case-histories, information on advances in molecular biology, development of analytical approaches to crop yield, environmental physics and much more.

Contents

CONTENTS Preface Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Development and Phenology. How Crops Fit Their Environment: Concepts and Case Histories 2.1 Crop Development: Concepts and Tools 2.1.1 Growth Stages and Phasic Development 2.1.2 Events at the Stem Apex: The Leek as a Simple Model Species 2.1.3 Events at Stem Apices: Branching and Reproductive Development in Wheat 2.1.4 Events at Stem Apices: The Consequences of Separation of Male and Female Organs in Maize 2.1.5 Phenology Determined by Events at Axillary Meristems: Determinate and Indeterminate Soybean Varieties 2.1.6 Components of Yield 2.2 Case Histories: The Influence of Environment and Management on Crop Development and Phenology 2.2.1 Convergence and Synchrony: The Influence of Sowing Date on Winter Wheat in Northern Europe 2.2.2 Crop Improvement and the Anthesis-Silking Interval in maize 2.2.3 Adaptation of Soybean to Different Latitudes: Phasic Analysis of the Photoperiodic Control of Flowering 2.2.4 Development in Storage: Physiological Age and Tuber Initiation in the Potato 2.2.5 Complementary Phenologies and Plant Habits in Mixed Cropping: Temperate Grass/Clover Swards 3. Interception of Solar Radiation by the Canopy 3.1 The Life History of a Leaf 3.2 The Components of Plant Leaf Area Expansion 3.2.1 Crop Emergence 3.2.2 Leaf Production 3.2.3 Leaf Expansion 3.2.4 Branching 3.2.5 Senescence, Removal and Damage: Leaf Life Span 3.3 The Development of the Crop Canopy: Leaf Area Index 3.3.1 Seasonal Development of Leaf Area Index 3.3.2 Leaf Area Index and Crop Management 3.4 Canopy Architecture and the Interception of Solar Radiation 3.4.1 Seasonal Patterns of Interception 3.4.2 Optimum and Critical Leaf Area Indices 3.4.3 Leaf Photosynthesis and Canopy Properties 3.4.4 Canopy Extinction Coefficient 4. Photosynthesis and Photorespiration 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Photosynthetic Efficiency 4.3 Photosynthetic Processes 4.3.1 Photosynthesis as a Cellular Biochemical Process 4.3.2 Photosynthesis as a Leaf Diffusive Process 4.3.3 Photosynthesis as a Crop Canopy Process 4.4 The C4 Photosynthesis Mechanism 4.5 Water Shortage and Photosynthesis 4.6 Nitrogen Effects on Photosynthesis 4.7 Ozone Effects on Photosynthesis and Crop Productivity 5. The Loss of CO2: Respiration 5.1 Introduction 5.2 The Basis of Crop Respiration 5.3 Growth and Maintenance Respiration 5.4 The Respiration of Different Plant Substrates 5.5 Growth and Maintenance Respiration in the Field 5.6 Respiration Associated with Crop Processes 5.7 Environmental Effects on Respiration 5.8 Crop Respiration in the Future 6. The Partitioning of Dry Matter to Harvested Organs 6.1 The Processes and Pathways of Assimilate Partitioning 6.2 Ontogeny and Assimilate Partitioning: A Survey of Source/Sink Relationships 6.3 Time Courses of Dry Matter Partitioning: Harvest Index 6.4 Limitation of Yield by Source or Sink 6.5 Sink Limitation of Yield in Cereals - Physiology of Ineffective Grain Setting 6.6 Assimilate Partitioning and Crop Improvement: Historic Trends in Harvest Index of Wheat and Barley 6.7 Assimilate Partitioning and Crop Improvement: Historic Trends in Harvest Index of Maize 6.8 Assimilate Partitioning to Potato Tubers 6.9 Assimilate Partitioning in Grassland: Implications for Management of Grass Yield 6.10 Assimilate Partitioning in Grassland: Implications for the Overwintering and Early Growth of White Clover 6.11 Assimilate Partitioning in Diseased Plants: Temperate Cereals Infected with Biotrophic Fungal Pathogens 7. Limiting Factors and the Achievement of High Yield 7.1 Limitation by Water Supply 7.1.1 Acquisition of Water 7.1.2 Water Use Efficiency 7.1.3 Crop Yield where Water Supply is Limiting 7.2 Limitation by Nitrogen Supply 7.2.1 Acquisition of Nitrogen 7.2.2 Nitrogen Use Efficiency 7.2.3 Crop Yield where N Supply is Limiting 7.3 Achieving High Yield: Resource Capture and Assimilate Partitioning 8. Physiology of Crop Quality 8.1 Wheat: Protein content 8.2 Soybean: Oil and Protein Contents 8.3 Oilseed Rape: Glucosinolates and Erucic Acid 8.4 Potato: Tuber Size and Processing Quality 8.5 The Quality of Conserved Forages: Ontogeny and Yield 9. The Simulation Modelling of Crops 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Building a Crop Model 9.3 Crop Models of Wheat (AFRC2), soybean (CROPGRO) and maize 9.3.1 The AFRC2 Wheat Model 9.3.2 The CROPGRO Soybean Model 9.3.3 The Maize Model 9.4 Modelling Variety Differences and Traits 9.5 Conclusions 10. The Future for Crop Physiology 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Lowering Inputs 10.3 Climate Change 10.4 Quality 10.5 New Crops 10.6 The Potential for Increasing Crop Photosynthesis and Yield 10.7 The Last Words References Indexes

Customer Reviews

Biography

Robert K M Hay was, until 2004, director of the Scottish Agricultural Science Agency. He is currently Visiting Professor in the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala. John R Porter is Professor of Agroecology at the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University in Denmark and was formerly President of the European Society for Agronomy.
By: RKM Hay and JR Porter
314 pages, illus
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Media reviews
Physiology of Crop Yield would be useful to any scientist who works to integrate and better understand growth, development and yield from a perspective of whole plant physiology.This is a much needed and timely publication.P.V. Vara Prasad, Kansas State University "Hay and Porter have produced an excellent book, well-suited for undergraduate teaching and for those seeking an overview of processes contributing to crop yield. They even tell us how long the sun needs to shine to deliver a bowl of breakfast cereal."Tim Wheeler, University of Reading ""Although described as the second edition of An Introduction to the Physiology of Crop Yield, which was authored by R. Hay and A. J. Walker (1989). The Physiology of Crop Yield is completely rewritten and focuses more explicitly on quantitative prediction of Crop growth. The Physiology of Crop Yield contains numerous line drawings and tables, as well as 30 pages of reference. The overall layout and design of text, tables, and figures follows that of traditional textbooks...the text seems well suited for an upper-level undergraduate course with a pre-requisite of plant physiology."Jeffrey W. White reproduced from Crop Science "This book extensively covers the theoretical aspects of crop physiological processes...It is useful for understanding and interpreting agronomic phenomena and therfore clearly has a considerable value to advanced students, teachers and scientists in the field of agronomy, crop management and even plant breeding. The array of literature cited is broad and also up-to-date. The Order of presentation is logical and comprehensive overviews are given...it remains an excellent reference that should be recommended for any teaching of crop phsiology at the graduate level."Annals of Botany, 1-2, 2007
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