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Response of barley and pea crops to supplementary UV-B radiation.

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Response of barley and pea crops to supplementary UV-B radiation. / Stephen, J.; Woodfin, R.; Corlett, J. E. et al.
In: Journal of Agricultural Science, Vol. 132, No. 3, 05.1999, p. 253-261.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Stephen J, Woodfin R, Corlett JE, Paul ND, Jones HG, Ayres PG. Response of barley and pea crops to supplementary UV-B radiation. Journal of Agricultural Science. 1999 May;132(3):253-261.

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Stephen, J. ; Woodfin, R. ; Corlett, J. E. et al. / Response of barley and pea crops to supplementary UV-B radiation. In: Journal of Agricultural Science. 1999 ; Vol. 132, No. 3. pp. 253-261.

Bibtex

@article{5f2bb497ab534fe88e8ceae440bd61b3,
title = "Response of barley and pea crops to supplementary UV-B radiation.",
abstract = "Four cultivars of winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and two cultivars of combining pea (Pisum sativum L.) were grown in the field in the UK (52°N) and irradiated under banks of UV-B lamps in 1994/95 (barley) and 1996 (pea). Supplementary UV-B radiation was applied to treated plots as a proportional addition to the UV-B dose received under a control plot. Treated plants received a UV-B enhancement simulating the consequence of a 15% reduction in the amount of stratospheric ozone. No significant effect on yield and few significant effects on growth, pigment composition or chlorophyll fluorescence variables were detected. However, interplot variability was such that yield differences of <8·5% (pea) and <21·6% (barley) had less than a 95% probability of being detected as significant at the 5% level. The results indicate that yields of pea, and probably barley, would not be markedly affected by the increase in UV-B associated with a 15% reduction in stratospheric ozone. However, given uncertainties, such as the possible interactions between the effects of UV-B and those of other environmental factors, the possibility of significant crop responses to stratospheric ozone depletion cannot be excluded.",
author = "J. Stephen and R. Woodfin and Corlett, {J. E.} and Paul, {Nigel D.} and Jones, {H. G.} and Ayres, {P. G.}",
year = "1999",
month = may,
language = "English",
volume = "132",
pages = "253--261",
journal = "Journal of Agricultural Science",
issn = "1469-5146",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Response of barley and pea crops to supplementary UV-B radiation.

AU - Stephen, J.

AU - Woodfin, R.

AU - Corlett, J. E.

AU - Paul, Nigel D.

AU - Jones, H. G.

AU - Ayres, P. G.

PY - 1999/5

Y1 - 1999/5

N2 - Four cultivars of winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and two cultivars of combining pea (Pisum sativum L.) were grown in the field in the UK (52°N) and irradiated under banks of UV-B lamps in 1994/95 (barley) and 1996 (pea). Supplementary UV-B radiation was applied to treated plots as a proportional addition to the UV-B dose received under a control plot. Treated plants received a UV-B enhancement simulating the consequence of a 15% reduction in the amount of stratospheric ozone. No significant effect on yield and few significant effects on growth, pigment composition or chlorophyll fluorescence variables were detected. However, interplot variability was such that yield differences of <8·5% (pea) and <21·6% (barley) had less than a 95% probability of being detected as significant at the 5% level. The results indicate that yields of pea, and probably barley, would not be markedly affected by the increase in UV-B associated with a 15% reduction in stratospheric ozone. However, given uncertainties, such as the possible interactions between the effects of UV-B and those of other environmental factors, the possibility of significant crop responses to stratospheric ozone depletion cannot be excluded.

AB - Four cultivars of winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and two cultivars of combining pea (Pisum sativum L.) were grown in the field in the UK (52°N) and irradiated under banks of UV-B lamps in 1994/95 (barley) and 1996 (pea). Supplementary UV-B radiation was applied to treated plots as a proportional addition to the UV-B dose received under a control plot. Treated plants received a UV-B enhancement simulating the consequence of a 15% reduction in the amount of stratospheric ozone. No significant effect on yield and few significant effects on growth, pigment composition or chlorophyll fluorescence variables were detected. However, interplot variability was such that yield differences of <8·5% (pea) and <21·6% (barley) had less than a 95% probability of being detected as significant at the 5% level. The results indicate that yields of pea, and probably barley, would not be markedly affected by the increase in UV-B associated with a 15% reduction in stratospheric ozone. However, given uncertainties, such as the possible interactions between the effects of UV-B and those of other environmental factors, the possibility of significant crop responses to stratospheric ozone depletion cannot be excluded.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 132

SP - 253

EP - 261

JO - Journal of Agricultural Science

JF - Journal of Agricultural Science

SN - 1469-5146

IS - 3

ER -