1958
DOI: 10.1104/pp.33.5.347
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Effects of High Temperature on Yield of Peas.

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Cited by 48 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Pea phenology is controlled by daylength and temperature, with temperatures typically ranging between 6 and 268C in most pea growing regions (Alcade et al 2000). High daily maximum temperatures (31 to348C) during flowering for at least 2 to 4 d reduce pea yield (Karr et al 1959) via abortion of buds and flowers (Guilioni et al 1997), aborted young seed (Jeuffroy et al 1990), and potentially smaller seed (Lambert and Linck 1958;Jeuffroy et al 1990;Ney et al 1993;Poggio et al 2005). Not all of these yield components are significantly reduced in every stress study though.…”
Section: Mots Clé Smentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Pea phenology is controlled by daylength and temperature, with temperatures typically ranging between 6 and 268C in most pea growing regions (Alcade et al 2000). High daily maximum temperatures (31 to348C) during flowering for at least 2 to 4 d reduce pea yield (Karr et al 1959) via abortion of buds and flowers (Guilioni et al 1997), aborted young seed (Jeuffroy et al 1990), and potentially smaller seed (Lambert and Linck 1958;Jeuffroy et al 1990;Ney et al 1993;Poggio et al 2005). Not all of these yield components are significantly reduced in every stress study though.…”
Section: Mots Clé Smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The effects of a single heat episode were reported by Lambert and Linck (1958) on a single highly indeterminate pea, cv. Alaska.…”
Section: Abortion and Pea Yieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Elevated temperature reduces seed yield in field pea (Lambert and Linck, 1958;Karr et al, 1959;Guilioni et al, 1997;Sadras et al, 2012;Bueckert et al, 2015) in two ways, by causing abortion of flowers and young pods, and by accelerating the crop lifecycle. Interestingly, the maximum temperature threshold affecting pea growth performance and yield formation under environmentally controlled conditions is higher than that threshold in the field.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No correlation was observed between ET efficiency and the other weather variables measured (Table 2). Heat and drought stress, particularly during flowering, have negative effects on seed yield (Lambert and Linck 1958;Maurer et al 1968;Pumphrey et al 1979;McDonald and Paulsen 1997). The efficiency of ET (dry matter basis) also decreases with increasing aridity (Tanner and Sinclair 1983).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%