2002
DOI: 10.2135/cropsci2002.0797
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Heat Stress during Flowering in Summer Brassica

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Cited by 137 publications
(135 citation statements)
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“…In domesticated B. napus, flowering was reached at about 576 GDD (about 47 d), pod fill was reached at about 860 GDD (about 66 d) and maturity was reached at about 1157 GDD (about 87 d) in western Canada (Morrison et al 1989;Kimber and McGregor 1995) with similar thermal time requirements in eastern Canada (Morrison and Stewart 2002). Domesticated B. rapa required about 60 d to reach maturity in western Canada (Kimber and McGregor 1995).…”
Section: Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In domesticated B. napus, flowering was reached at about 576 GDD (about 47 d), pod fill was reached at about 860 GDD (about 66 d) and maturity was reached at about 1157 GDD (about 87 d) in western Canada (Morrison et al 1989;Kimber and McGregor 1995) with similar thermal time requirements in eastern Canada (Morrison and Stewart 2002). Domesticated B. rapa required about 60 d to reach maturity in western Canada (Kimber and McGregor 1995).…”
Section: Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The period from 1998 to 2010, now known in Australia as the millennium drought (Verdon-Kidd et al 2014) was characterised by dry autumns, late planting rains and limited soil water storage, together with hot, dry springs which favoured cereals such as wheat and barley over canola. As the area of canola declined and the crop retreated to the more reliable rainfall areas, the overall yield levels were maintained, except for the notable drought years of 2002 and2006 (Fig. 2).…”
Section: Background and Production Trendsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lilley et al (2015) recently incorporated frost and heat indices into simulation predictions based on limited published data on the impacts of temperature extremes on yield in the field, and although field validation is limited, yield predictions were improved in a recent study on sowing time effects in NSW (Kirkegaard et al 2016). Improved understanding of the impacts of temperature extremes on yield and quality in canola and improving genetic tolerance remain key objectives for physiologists (Morrison and Stewart 2002;Robertson and Lilley 2016) and breeders in Australia and elsewhere. Morrison et al (2016b) present a novel screening technique to investigate the impacts of heat on pollen germination, which is often assumed to be the major cause of sterility and yield loss under heat stress.…”
Section: Phenology Physiology and Modellingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the temperate legume crop pea (Pisum sativum L.), a temperate above 25°C can be considered as limiting (Guilioni et al, 2003). Regarding the differing effects of temperature on the plant physiology in each range, stress-inducing temperature has been defined as severe when temperature exceeds 35°C for a few hours a day for a few days (Guilioni & Jeuffroy, 2010 (Morrison & Stewart, 2002). In temperate cereals as wheat, two heat ranges may produce distinct negative reactions: a moderate high temperature range between 15 and 32°C, and a severe heat stress above 32°C (Wardlaw & Wrigley, 1994).…”
Section: Impact Of Heat Stress On Plant N Fluxesmentioning
confidence: 99%