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Weather conditions outside growing season very important for cereal yield

Corporate Communications Center

phone: +49 8161 5403 - email: presse@tum.de - web: www.tum.de

This text on the web: https://www.tum.de/en/about-tum/news/press-releases/details/37019

High resolution images: https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/1633290

NEWS RELEASE

Winter important for cereal yield

Weather conditions outside growing season very important

The weather conditions in the winter and during the transitional phases from fall to winter and winter to spring have a significant influence on the yield level of key cereal crops, such as winter barley and winter wheat. These were the findings of a research team of scientists at the Chair of Plant Nutrition at the Technical University of Munich (TUM).

Global climate change is predicted to increase temperatures and change the distribution of precipitation. It remains uncertain as to how climate change will affect regions and what level of intensity they will have, though.

Scientists at the Chair of Plant Nutrition at TUM have recently investigated the effects of various weather parameters on the long-term yields of winter barley, and evaluated the parameters that have a decisive impact on plant development throughout the year and during specific growth phases.

Weather is more than temperature and precipitation during the growing season

“Our continuous field trials in Dürnast near Freising (Bavaria) have provided a very comprehensive archive of data for studying the relationships between climate change and yields,” explains first author Dr. Kurt Heil. The soil available here consists of very fertile Pleistocene Loess.

Previous studies on the influence of the weather conditions on agricultural yields have focused almost exclusively on the influence of the water supply (drought stress) and temperature (heat) during the growing season. In their study, Dr. Kurt Heil and his team at the Chair of Plant Nutrition have looked at the weather parameters outside the growing season – a topic to have received less attention to date.

Consider frost change days, temperature thresholds and the intensity of precipitation

“Late frosts can sometimes occur in our area as late as May,” explains Heil. As winter periods end earlier nowadays on a perennial average, late frosts of this kind have a significant impact on plant health, as the plant already begins to grow at a temperature of a few plus degrees, so the young shoots are damaged by late frosts.

With higher rates of nitrogen fertilization, however, weather patterns become increasingly significant during growing seasons, which has also caused plants to become more sensitive to extreme weather conditions. When more fertilizer is used, plants grow more strongly, which means they consume more water and in the absence of precipitation are hit harder by drought than they are when they grow less strongly.

“Temperature and precipitation are of importance with all calculations in all variants, but to a lesser extent when they are considered as totals or averages. Specific indices such as frost change days, temperature thresholds, the precipitation intensity, rain-free days, the early or late frost index and the drought index are of greater relevance in this context,” explains Urs Schmidhalter, Professor of Plant Nutrition at TUM.

The effects of climate change on high-yield locations

In the study, the annual variations in crop yields were largely determined by the prevailing climatic conditions in the winter as well as by the transition periods from the warmer season to the winter and vice versa. According to the study, indices such as temperature thresholds, frost change days and precipitation intensity are particularly important in the winter. During the main growing seasons, it was only the intensity of the rainfall that was of considerable importance.

“These results can be attributed to the high availability of the available field water capacity at this location, which significantly reduces the need for summer precipitation when the stores of groundwater are replenished in the winter,” says Heil.

Overall, the results expand the range of the potential effects of climate change and are transferable to high-yield locations in Western Europe, which are among the world’s most fertile and high-yield places of cultivation and therefore predestined and important for food production. The continuation of long-term experiments also suggests essential insights and predictions concerning the effects of climate change in the future.

Publications:

Heil, K.; Gerl, S.; Schmidhalter, U.

Sensitivity of Winter Barley Yield to Climate Variability in a Pleistocene Loess Area.

Climate 2021, 9, 112 – DOI: 10.3390/cli9070112

Heil, K.; Lehner, A.; Schmidhalter, U.

Influence of Climate Conditions on the Temporal Development of Wheat Yields in a Long-Term Experiment in an Area with Pleistocene Loess.

Climate 2020, 8, 100 – DOI: 10.3390/cli8090100

More information:

The project was funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) as part of the joint project BonaRes I4S.

High resolution images: https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/1633290

Contact:

Dr. Kurt Heil

Technical University of Munich

Scientist at the Chair of Plant Nutrition

phone: +49 8161 71 3906

kheil(at)wzw.tum.de

With over 600 professors, 48,000 students and 11,000 employees, the Technical University of Munich (TUM) is one of the most research-intensive technical universities in Europe. It focuses on engineering, natural sciences, life sciences and medicine, combined with economics and the social sciences. TUM acts as an entrepreneurial university which fosters talent and creates added value for human society. In this respect, it benefits from strong partnerships in science and industry. It is represented worldwide by the TUM Asia campus in Singapore as well as liaison offices in Brussels, Mumbai, Beijing, San Francisco and São Paulo. Nobel Prize winners and inventors such as Rudolf Diesel, Carl von Linde and Rudolf Mößbauer have completed research at the TUM. In 2006, 2012, and 2019, it was designated as a University of Excellence. In international rankings, it regularly ranks among the best universities in Germany. www.tum.de

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