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Defining soybean maturity group options for contrasting weather scenarios in the American Southern Cone

Abstract
Soybean genotypes are grouped in maturity groups (MG) based on the response to photoperiod, and a genotype belonging to a particular MG is recommended according to latitude and planting date. From an agronomic viewpoint, an “optimum maturity group” (MGopt) can be defined as the one that maximizes soybean yield in a particular environment, and not necessarily corresponds with the recommended MG based on thermo-photoperiod response. Our objectives were to [ver mas...]
Soybean genotypes are grouped in maturity groups (MG) based on the response to photoperiod, and a genotype belonging to a particular MG is recommended according to latitude and planting date. From an agronomic viewpoint, an “optimum maturity group” (MGopt) can be defined as the one that maximizes soybean yield in a particular environment, and not necessarily corresponds with the recommended MG based on thermo-photoperiod response. Our objectives were to (i) delineate spatial pattern of MGopt across contrasting environmental conditions for full-season soybean using geostatistics, and (ii) test whether the weather scenario change the spatial distribution of the MGopt. We hypothesized that, for the same region, the MGopt in dry years (i.e. La Niña phase) is larger than in humid years (i.e. El Niño phase). We analyzed multi-environment trials of full-season soybean (1675 site-years) using recent soybean genotypes and management practices across the Southern Cone of America. The MGopt ranged between 3.8 and 7.8 across regions and ENSO phases. The geostatistics approach indicated a spatial MGopt auto-correlation. The map for each ENSO phase indicates zones with contrasting MGopt and independently of ENSO phase, MGopt increased as latitude decreased. Also, for a particular latitude range, MGopt also varied according to longitude, suggesting that its variation can be associated with rainfall pattern and soil types in the region. Our approach delineated the distribution of MGopt for the American Southern Cone and highlighted that the inclusion of ENSO phase is important for guiding farmers MG options at regional scale. [Cerrar]
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Author
Di Mauro, Guido;   Parra, Gonzalo;   Santos, Diego Jose;   Enrico, Juan Martin;   Zuil, Sebastian;   Murgio, Marcos;   Zbinden, Facundo;   Costanzi, Jerónimo;   Arias, Norma Monica;   Carrio, Alejandro Javier;   Vissani, Cristian Angel;   Fuentes, Francisco Horacio;   Salvagiotti, Fernando;  
Fuente
Field Crops Research 287 : 108676 (October 2022)
Date
2022-10
Editorial
Elsevier
ISSN
0378-4290
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/12851
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378429022002477
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2022.108676
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Proyectos (ver más)

INTA/2019-RIST-E6-I226-001/2019-RIST-E6-I226-001/AR./Red de evaluación de cultivares

Palabras Claves
Soja; Soybeans; Tiempo Meteorológico; Weather; Madurez; Maturity; Manejo del Cultivo; Crop Management; América del Sur; South America;
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Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
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