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How Do Warming Temperature and Elevating CO2 Affect the Physio-chemical Properties of Brown and Milled Rice? KCI 등재

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  • URLhttps://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/319911
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한국작물학회 (Korean Society Of Crop Science)
초록

To know how interacting climate drivers may affect rice quality, we investigated physio-chemical properties of brown and milled rice. Rice crops (Oryza sativa L., cv. Ilmybyeo and Pyounganbyeo) were grown under either ambient [370ppmV (2008)/396ppmV (2009)] or elevated CO2 of 650ppmV (2008)/673ppmV (2009) in three levels of air temperature [(Ta), local ambient Ta [25.9℃ (2008)/24.8℃ (2009)], 1.3℃ and 2.4℃ above ambient Ta] over whole seasons, using six temperature gradient chambers established in paddy fields. Over 2 years, thus the experiments were a 2×3 factorial design with three replicate plots of each CO2×Ta combination. The fractions of normal brown rice were reduced with elevating CO2 by 8% (Ilmybyeo)~14% (Pyounganbyeo), and with rising Ta by 16% (+1.3 ℃)~27% (+2.4℃) in Ilmybyeo and by 27% (+1.3℃)~42% (+2.4℃) in Pyounganbyeo (p=0.015, 0.000, 0.059, 0.000 and 0.017 for CO2, Ta, CO2×Ta, cultivar and Ta×cultivar, respectively). With respect to immature rice, elevating CO2 increased milky-white rice, white-based rice and white-belly rice across cultivars. Warming also significantly increased all immature rice across cultivars, though no CO2×Ta interaction was observed. Over 2 years, the deteriorative effect of warming on brown rice quality was significantly greater in Pyounganbyeo than in Ilmybyeo. Across cultivars, protein contents of milled rice were decreased (c. 5~9%) with elevating CO2 but increased (c. 5%) with warming, though no CO2×Ta interaction was found (p=0.119). Elevating CO2 significantly increased whiteness of milled rice over cultivars but not amylose contents and gloss value of cooked rice, while warming had a strong affect these properties all related rice quality. Overall, our results suggest that warming and elevating CO2, in each alone or in combination, may have the potential to deteriorate physio-chemical properties of rice related to quality.

저자
  • Han-Yong Kim(Department of Plant Science) Corresponding author
  • Myoung-Seok Lee(Department of Plant Science)
  • Byoung-Man Kang(Department of Plant Science)
  • Dong-Jun Chang(Department of Plant Science)
  • Woo-Jung Choi(Department of Rural and Bio-Systems Engineering, Chonnam National University)
  • Kyu-Nam An(Rice Research Division, Jeollanam-do ARES)
  • Oh-Do Kwon(Rice Research Division, Jeollanam-do ARES)
  • Heung-Gyu Park(Rice Research Division, Jeollanam-do ARES)
  • Hae-Ryoung Shin(Rice Research Division, Jeollanam-do ARES)