Litcius/Paper detail

Water for agriculture: more crop per drop

Christoph‐Martin Geilfus, Christian Zörb, J. J. Jones, Monika Wimmer, Sandra M. Schmöckel

2024Plant Biology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Global crop production in agriculture depends on water availability. Future scenarios predict increasing occurrence of flash floods and rapidly developing droughts accompanied by heatwaves in humid regions that rely on rain-fed agriculture. It is challenging to maintain high crop yields, even in arid and drought-prone regions that depend on irrigation. The average water demand of crops varies significantly, depending on plant species, development stage, and climate. Most crops, such as maize and wheat, require relatively more water during the vegetative phase compared to the ripening phase. In this review, we explain WUE and options to improve water use and thus crop yield. Nutrient management might represent another possibility to manipulate water uptake and use by plants. An emerging topic involves agroforest co-cultivation, where trees in the system facilitate water transfer through hydraulic lift, benefiting neighbouring crops. Other options to enhance crop yield per water use are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

AgricultureCropAridAgronomyWater useBiologyIrrigationWater scarcityAgroforestryYield (engineering)Crop yieldEnvironmental scienceEcologyMetallurgyMaterials sciencePlant responses to water stressPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsIrrigation Practices and Water Management