2023
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13092349
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Improving Crop Health, Performance, and Quality in Organic Spring Wheat Production: The Need to Understand Interactions between Pedoclimatic Conditions, Variety, and Fertilization

Andrew Wilkinson,
John N. Wilkinson,
Peter Shotton
et al.

Abstract: Organic wheat production systems have lower yields compared with intensive conventional production and often do not achieve the grain protein content and quality thresholds set by millers and bakers. In contrast, organic production methods were reported to result in higher concentrations of nutritionally desirable micronutrients and lower concentrations of the toxic metal Cd in wheat grain and wholegrain flour. However, although N-availability and variety characteristics are known to affect both gain yields an… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…It is important to point out that recent factorial experimental and survey-based studies with wheat have also identified significant (i) genetics × agronomy, (ii) environment × genetics × agronomy, and (iii) genetics × agronomy × processing interactions for a range of nutritionally relevant compounds (including phenolics, mineral micronutrients, pesticide residues, mycotoxins) [4,19,20,28,[31][32][33][56][57][58]84,85]. While explaining the large variation and sometimes inconsistency of results from studies carried out in different counties, seasons, and pedoclimatic environments identified in systematic reviews/meta-analyses of comparative crop composition data [23,24], this also highlights the risk of bias when conclusions about the effects of intensification on food quality are based on evidence from individual or only a small number of studies/environments.…”
Section: Agronomic Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is important to point out that recent factorial experimental and survey-based studies with wheat have also identified significant (i) genetics × agronomy, (ii) environment × genetics × agronomy, and (iii) genetics × agronomy × processing interactions for a range of nutritionally relevant compounds (including phenolics, mineral micronutrients, pesticide residues, mycotoxins) [4,19,20,28,[31][32][33][56][57][58]84,85]. While explaining the large variation and sometimes inconsistency of results from studies carried out in different counties, seasons, and pedoclimatic environments identified in systematic reviews/meta-analyses of comparative crop composition data [23,24], this also highlights the risk of bias when conclusions about the effects of intensification on food quality are based on evidence from individual or only a small number of studies/environments.…”
Section: Agronomic Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, similar to cereals, it is well known that there is substantial variation in nutritional composition between varieties/hybrids/genotypes in many fruit and vegetable species. This includes grapes and tomatoes, which are considered staples and significant drivers for phenolic, vitamin, mineral, and antioxidant intake and the associated health benefits of MedDiets [37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][84][85][86][87][88][89][90][91][92][93][94].…”
Section: Effects Of Intensification On the Nutritional Composition Of...mentioning
confidence: 99%