From

To

LIVE Commodity Data
print view |  email to friend

eNews from Friday, November 13, 2009

ARS Scientists Find Ozone Levels Already Affecting Soybean Yields

Press Release -- November 13, 2009 -- Current atmospheric ozone levels are already suppressing soybean yields, according to Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists and university cooperators studying the effect of global climate change on crops.

PAID ADVERTISEMENT
ARS plant physiologists Don Ort and Carl Bernacchi, molecular biologist Lisa Ainsworth and geneticist Randall Nelson have been working with University of Illinois scientists on a project called “SoyFACE”—short for Soybean Free Air Concentration Enrichment—to measure how the projected increases in carbon dioxide (CO2) and ozone will affect soybean production. This research supports the U.S. Department of Agriculture priority of responding to climate change.

In their studies, the scientists found that soybean yields increase by about 12 percent at the elevated CO2 levels predicted for the year 2050 (550 parts per million)—only half of what previous studies estimated. They also found that increased ozone is quite harmful to soybean yields, reducing them by about 20 percent.

In addition, current levels of ozone are already suppressing soybean yields by up to 15 percent, according to Ort, who is also research leader of the ARS Photosynthesis Research Unit in Urbana, Ill.

These results led the scientists to examine the combined effects of CO2 and ozone changes on soybeans. They found that elevated CO2 partially offsets the ozone damage, confirming general results obtained with open-top chamber studies conducted at other ARS laboratories.

The ability of SoyFACE technology to test effects of CO2 and ozone in the open air, without the environmental modifications caused by the chambers themselves, means greater confidence in understanding how plants respond in the real world, including the actual estimates of impact on crop yields, according to Ort. FACE technology was first used for crop research by ARS scientists in Maricopa, Ariz., and cooperators.

There is much more to be learned about how other interacting factors that affect ozone uptake may come into play by mid-century. Results from these studies will help breeders develop soybean varieties better adapted to the changing climate.

Read more about this research in the November/December 2009 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

ARS is USDA’s principal intramural scientific research agency.

By Stephanie Yao



Editor's Picks from Recent eNews

USDA, Bunge, Surface Transportation Board Leaders Among High Level Speakers to Address Annual Ag Trade Conference

TechnoServe and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to Launch New Southern Africa Soy Value Chain Development Program at Soy Innovation Africa in August 2010

Agriculture's Next Revolution -- Perennial Grain -- Within Sight, Say Washington State University Scientists

Producing Ethanol From Corn Becoming Increasingly Energy Efficient: New USDA Report

Higher Commodity Prices Expected in Next Decade, Food Security Concerns Persist: OECD and FAO Report

Features


Cultivating Potential in Emerging Markets
August 26-27, 2010
The Westin Grand
Cape Town, South Africa

Sponsored Links

Online Auction - Seasame Seed Processing Plant

Bestselling Author Brian Wansink Speaking at 2010 Soy Symposium

Practical Short Course on Aquaculture Feed Extrusion, Nutrition & Feed Management

Live Commodity Prices on Soyatech.com

Copyright © 2000-2010 Soyatech, LLC. • P.O. Box 1307 • Southwest Harbor, ME 04679 • USA