
Read: more
in the April issue of Agricultural Research magazine. Ozone: New Wrinkle in Crop Yield
ProjectionBy Judy McBride April 21, 2000By 2050, the amount of carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere is expected to be twice preindustrial levels. And research
shows that extra CO2 in the atmosphere stimulates growth and increases yield in
a variety of food and fiber crops. But does it really? Agricultural Research Servicescientists in Raleigh, NC, are finding that the air pollutant ozone is adding
another wrinkle to models that predict food supply based on projected CO2
levels. Studies conducted by Joseph Miller, Allen Heagle, Edwin Fiscus and
Fitzgerald Booker suggest that the models may often overestimate the impact of
CO2 enrichment because they dont also factor in ozone. Extra CO2 by itself will stimulate some growth because plants have more
food for photosynthesis. Ozone, on the other hand, damages plant
tissue and decreases crop yield. But extra CO2 partially closes the leaf pores,
or stomates, through which plants exchange gases. This reduces the ozone that
gets in and the water vapor that gets out. So if plants are under ozone or
water stress, CO2 enrichment elicits a greater response. The more ozone stress,
the more damage prevention by CO2 and the greater the apparent stimulation of
plant growth. When the Raleigh scientists grew plants under low ozone, increasing CO2
concentration didnt always stimulate growth appreciably. So far, they
have seen this interaction in field tests of soybeans, winter wheat, rice, and
cotton and in greenhouse tests of snap bean and white clover, a forage crop.
Each crop or variety responded to a greater or lesser degree, depending on its
sensitivity to each gas, but the trend was the same. This suggests that crop
yields in high CO2 environments may not be as high as models have suggested. The Raleigh findings run counter to similar experiments in other parts of
the country. That may be due to unrecognized differences in water or ozone
stress among different studies. Traditionally, such studies have looked at the
effects of each gas separately. The Raleigh group combined different levels of
the two gasses. Read more in the April issue of Agricultural Research magazine. ARS is the USDA's chief scientific
agency. Scientific contact: Joseph E. Miller or Allen S. Heagle, ARS
Air
Quality-Plant Growth and Development Research Unit, Raleigh, N.C.; phone
(919) 515-3312, fax (919) 515-3593, [email protected],
[email protected]. Story contacts Edwin Lewis Fiscus Fitzgerald Lewis Booker U.S. Department of Agriculture |