RMIT University
Browse

Effects of elevated CO2 and temperature on yield and fruit quality of strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa Duch.) at two levels of nitrogen application

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 12:25 authored by Peng Sun, Nitin MantriNitin Mantri, Heqiang Lou, Ya Hu, Dan Sun, Yueqing Zhu, Tingting Dong, Hongfei Lu
We investigated if elevated CO2 could alleviate the negative effect of high temperature on fruit yield of strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa Duch. cv. Toyonoka) at different levels of nitrogen and also tested the combined effects of CO2, temperature and nitrogen on fruit quality of plants cultivated in controlled growth chambers. Results show that elevated CO2 and high temperature caused a further 12% and 35% decrease in fruit yield at low and high nitrogen, respectively. The fewer inflorescences and smaller umbel size during flower induction caused the reduction of fruit yield at elevated CO2 and high temperature. Interestingly, nitrogen application has no beneficial effect on fruit yield, and this may be because of decreased sucrose export to the shoot apical meristem at floral transition. Moreover, elevated CO2 increased the levels of dry matter-content, fructose, glucose, total sugar and sweetness index per dry matter, but decreased fruit nitrogen content, total antioxidant capacity and all antioxidant compounds per dry matter in strawberry fruit. The reduction of fruit nitrogen content and antioxidant activity was mainly caused by the dilution effect of accumulated non-structural carbohydrates sourced from the increased net photosynthetic rate at elevated CO2. Thus, the quality of strawberry fruit would increase because of the increased sweetness and the similar amount of fruit nitrogen content, antioxidant activity per fresh matter at elevated CO2. Overall, we found that elevated CO2 improved the production of strawberry (including yield and quality) at low temperature, but decreased it at high temperature. The dramatic fluctuation in strawberry yield between low and high temperature at elevated CO2 implies that more attention should be paid to the process of flower induction under climate change, especially in fruits that require winter chilling for reproductive growth.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1371/journal.pone.0041000
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 19326203

Journal

PLoS ONE

Volume

7

Number

e41000

Issue

7

Start page

1

End page

12

Total pages

12

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2012 Sun et al.

Former Identifier

2006038434

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-12-10