Photosynthetic Performance and Water-Use-Efficiency in Grasses
A special issue of Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This special issue belongs to the section "Water Use and Irrigation".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2020) | Viewed by 17245
Special Issue Editors
Interests: physiology and ecophysiology of grasses; photosynthesis; water relations; plant growth analysis; leaf gas exchange
Interests: plant CO2 and H2O exchange; stable isotopes; mesophyll conductance; hydraulic conductance
Interests: plant physiology; isotopes; food chemistry; plant water relations; mass spectrometry
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Grasses produce key staple grains, sugars, fodder, feedstocks, and materials that support manufacturing and construction, as well as being critical to land reclamation. Historical ecological impacts of agriculture have been tied to the introduction and improvement of agronomically important grasses, and the future development of grass crops will influence agricultural responses to climate change and the challenge of improving the sustainability of resources.
Grasses demonstrate both evolutionary and ecological flexibility, having repeatedly evolved novel photosynthetic systems and unique morphological and life-history strategies, allowing them to occupy almost every habitat on Earth. The success of grasses in agricultural production has been the result of intensive yield selection and improved agronomic practices, yet many aspects of physiology and phenology unique to grasses remain understudied.
Critical insights are sought into how photosynthetic performance and the efficiency of water use have impacted and may impact grass agronomic management. Reviews, experimental and/or modelling studies will quantitatively assess the impacts of physiology, allocation, and/or phenology, at tissue, organ, plant, canopy, and/or crop levels. Contexts include domestication and selection histories, genetic variation, novel strategies for crop improvement, interspecific comparisons, and cropping systems incorporating grasses.
Dr. Samuel Taylor
Dr. Meisha Holloway-Phillips
Dr. Andrew Merchant
Dr. Gemma Molero
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- grasses
- photosynthesis
- water use
- agronomy
- crop improvement
- forage
- fodder
- grain
- feedstock
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