2011
DOI: 10.1017/s0021859611000694
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Sensitivity of barley varieties to weather in Finland

Abstract: SUMMARYGlobal climate change is predicted to shift seasonal temperature and precipitation patterns. An increasing frequency of extreme weather events such as heat waves and prolonged droughts is predicted, but there are high levels of uncertainty about the nature of local changes. Crop adaptation will be important in reducing potential damage to agriculture. Crop diversity may enhance resilience to climate variability and changes that are difficult to predict. Therefore, there has to be sufficient diversity wi… Show more

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Cited by 88 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(108 reference statements)
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“…It seems likely that higher temperatures will lead to diminished efficiency in seed filling as increased temperatures and heat stress accelerate plant development and shorten developmental phases, resulting in early maturation and decrease in yield (Barnabas et al 2008;Hatfield et al 2011). Especially the plant's reproductive stage is sensitive to high temperature, and optimum temperature for yield is generally lower than optimum for vegetative growth (Hatfield et al 2011). Hakala et al (2012 in a study of Finnish barley cultivar trials from year 1976 to 2004 documented that when temperatures were high-more than 28°C-over several days just before and after heading in barley, yield was substantially depressed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It seems likely that higher temperatures will lead to diminished efficiency in seed filling as increased temperatures and heat stress accelerate plant development and shorten developmental phases, resulting in early maturation and decrease in yield (Barnabas et al 2008;Hatfield et al 2011). Especially the plant's reproductive stage is sensitive to high temperature, and optimum temperature for yield is generally lower than optimum for vegetative growth (Hatfield et al 2011). Hakala et al (2012 in a study of Finnish barley cultivar trials from year 1976 to 2004 documented that when temperatures were high-more than 28°C-over several days just before and after heading in barley, yield was substantially depressed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High genetic diversity may enhance the environmental adaptation potential of a cultivar (Hakala et al 2012), however, it is often anticipated that the recurrent breeding leading to modern crops have reduced their genetic variation and thus their adaptability. In barley-the crop under study here-the genetic variation has been analyzed e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet field observations confirm that farmers in this community continue to use traditional risk management strategies, such as planting some of their plots to a mixture of local potato varieties (chalis). Maintaining crop and variety portfolios with different traits and tolerances provides response diversity that mitigates losses from weather and market shocks (di Falco and Perrings 2003;Halloy et al 2005;di Falco and Chavas 2009;Perez et al 2010;Hakala et al 2012;McDowell and Hess 2012;Kahiluoto et al 2014). Most households in all the communities cultivated several potato varieties, including non-bitter and hardy bitter varieties.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Finland, for example, high (≥ 25°C) and very high (≥ 28°C) temperatures around heading were associated with significant yield losses over a 40-year period (Hakala et al 2012). In the NAR, temperatures above 25°C can occur in July or August in most of coastal Norway and Newfoundland.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%