CO2 elevation and N fertilizer supply modulate leaf physiology, crop growth and water use efficiency of maize in response to progressive soil drought

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Manyi Zhang
  • Guiyu Wei
  • Bingjing Cui
  • Chunshuo Liu
  • Heng Wan
  • Jingxiang Hou
  • Chen, Yiting
  • Jiarui Zhang
  • Jie Liu
  • Zhenhua Wei

Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration (e[CO2]) and varied nitrogen (N) fertilization levels may mediate the different responses of C4 crops to progressive soil drought. In this study, the effects of reduced N (N1, 0.8 g pot−1) and adequate N (N2, 1.6 g pot−1) supply on leaf physiology, plant growth and water use efficiency (WUE) of maize (C4 crop) exposed to progressive soil drought grown at ambient CO2 (a[CO2], 400 ppm) and elevated CO2 (e[CO2], 800 ppm) concentration were investigated. The results indicated that compared with a[CO2], net photosynthetic rate (An) and leaf water potential (Ψl) at e[CO2] were maintained in maize leaves, while stomatal conductance (gs), transpiration rate and leaf hydraulic conductance were decreased, leading to enhanced WUE from stomatal to leaf scale. Despite An and Ψl of e[CO2] plants were more sensitive to progressive soil drought under both N fertilization levels, e[CO2] would increase leaf ABA concentration ([ABA]leaf) but decline the gs response to [ABA]leaf under N1 supply. e[CO2] coupled with N1 fertilization was conducive to enlarging leaf area, promoting specific leaf area, root and total dry mass, whereas reduced stomatal aperture and plant water use under progressive drought stress, contributing to an improvement in plant WUE, implying a better modulation of maize leaf stomata and water status under reduced N supply combined with e[CO2] responding to progressive soil drought. These findings in the current study would provide valuable advice for N management on maize (C4) crop efficient water use in a drier and CO2-enriched environment.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12692
JournalJournal of Agronomy and Crop Science
Volume210
Issue number2
Number of pages13
ISSN0931-2250
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Research areas

  • CO elevation, leaf physiology, maize, N fertilization, progressive soil drought, water use efficiency

ID: 387741383