Crop plants grow, and then, they allocate resources to different structures, including seeds and fruits, which represent yield in most crops. We define the yield stability of a genotype as its ability to reduce the effects of temporal variation in resources and conditions on yield production, and we argue that yield stability can be understood in terms of two processes: (1) crop survival and growth (biomass production): the ability of the crop plants to survive and produce biomass under the range of conditions to which it is exposed and (2) the pattern of allocation of this biomass to yield across this range of conditions. Plant breeders and crop physiologists have focused on (1), but much less attention has been paid to (2). We hypothesize...
Technological change in plant research rarely shifts the entire yield distribution upwards as assume...
This chapter considers the genetic basis of yield potential and the implications for breeding, ident...
This paper reviews recent progress in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), rice (Oryza sativa L.), and maiz...
Yield improvement for smallholder farmers in developing countries via crop breeding has been slow, i...
Yield components are relatively easy to measure and their interpretation is intuitive. However, stro...
International audience1. Calls for the application of ecological principles in agriculture have gain...
Calls for ecological principles in agriculture have gained momentum. Intercropping systems have long...
Yield losses occurring at the field level, whether due to plant diseases or abiotic stresses, reveal...
A large increase in yield during the history of crop improvement has been achieved as a consequence ...
Abstract The evolution in the definition of crop yield—from the ratio of seed harvested to seed sown...
Relative importance of harvest index (I) and total biomass yield (B) to economic yield (Y) was asses...
Resource allocation to reproduction is a critical trait for plant fitness (1,2). This trait, called ...
Yield Dynamics Of Major Crops Species Vary Remarkably Among Continents. Worldwide Distribution Of Cr...
Mixed cultivation of two or more crop species on the same piece of land at a given time may enhance ...
Technological change in plant research rarely shifts the entire yield distribution upwards as assume...
This chapter considers the genetic basis of yield potential and the implications for breeding, ident...
This paper reviews recent progress in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), rice (Oryza sativa L.), and maiz...
Yield improvement for smallholder farmers in developing countries via crop breeding has been slow, i...
Yield components are relatively easy to measure and their interpretation is intuitive. However, stro...
International audience1. Calls for the application of ecological principles in agriculture have gain...
Calls for ecological principles in agriculture have gained momentum. Intercropping systems have long...
Yield losses occurring at the field level, whether due to plant diseases or abiotic stresses, reveal...
A large increase in yield during the history of crop improvement has been achieved as a consequence ...
Abstract The evolution in the definition of crop yield—from the ratio of seed harvested to seed sown...
Relative importance of harvest index (I) and total biomass yield (B) to economic yield (Y) was asses...
Resource allocation to reproduction is a critical trait for plant fitness (1,2). This trait, called ...
Yield Dynamics Of Major Crops Species Vary Remarkably Among Continents. Worldwide Distribution Of Cr...
Mixed cultivation of two or more crop species on the same piece of land at a given time may enhance ...
Technological change in plant research rarely shifts the entire yield distribution upwards as assume...
This chapter considers the genetic basis of yield potential and the implications for breeding, ident...
This paper reviews recent progress in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), rice (Oryza sativa L.), and maiz...