M.C.S Wopereis
Rice University
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Publication
Featured researches published by M.C.S Wopereis.
European Journal of Agronomy | 2002
M.M. Wopereis-Pura; H. Watanabe; J. Moreira; M.C.S Wopereis
Abstract The effect of an additional nitrogen (N) application of 30 kg N ha −1 at booting on rice yield and grain quality was investigated with 30 farmers in the Senegal River valley during the 1997 wet season (WS) and 23 farmers during the 1998 dry season (DS). Rice yields increased significantly as a result of an extra late N application on top of two N-dressings with a total of about 120 kg N ha −1 in farmer fields. Yield gains were about 1.0 t ha −1 during the 1998 DS and about 0.4 t ha −1 during the 1997 WS. Grain quality was improved through a higher milling recovery (3% increase in both seasons) and a higher percentage of head rice (30% higher in the 1997 WS and 60% higher in the 1998 DS). Benefit to cost ratios of the third nitrogen application for farmers ranged from 2.8 in the WS to 5.4 in the DS. Sorting milled rice resulted in net additional benefits for rice millers, especially in the DS, due to a higher head rice ratio. It was concluded that a third N application can raise both yield levels and grain quality in the Senegal River valley, with potential benefits for farmers and rice millers.
Field Crops Research | 1998
M. Sié; Michaël Dingkuhn; M.C.S Wopereis; K.M. Miézan
Abstract Variable crop duration is a major constraint to rice double cropping in arid irrigated environments, such as the Sahel. Photoperiodism and low air and water temperatures during the cool season are the major causes of variability, and cultivars are needed whose photothermal response provides a more stable crop duration. A previous study analyzed cultivar photothermal constants on the basis of progress to flowering. The present study sought to identify, on the basis of leaf appearance rates, the phenological stages that are most sensitive photothermally, and to explore technical options to screen germplasm for stable crop duration. Three Oryza sativa , indica-type rice cultivars (Jaya, IKP, IR64) were sown in the field at 15-day intervals during the dry season of 1995 (11 sowing dates) and 1996 (5 sowing dates) in Ndiaye, Senegal, under full irrigation and wide spacing to reduce microclimate variability. Mean daily water temperature ( T w ) varied from 13 to 35°C. After seed soaking, the rate at which the first leaf ( L 1 ) appeared was linearly related with T w , with a base temperature ( T base ) of about 10°C. Appearance rates of the subsequent three leaves ( L 2 – L 4 ) had a similar T base , and presented a distinct temperature optimum ( T opt ) at about 23°C, beyond which development rates decreased. Errors were too large to determine differences among cultivars in thermal constants. No significant temperature response was observed for the leaf appearances between L 5 to the flag leaf ( L 12 to L 20 ). Crop duration to flowering varied by 45 (IR64) and 63 days (Jaya). These variations were associated with highly variable leaf numbers in all cultivars, including photoperiod-insensitive IKP. One-third of the variable duration was hypothesized to be due to a variable basic vegetative phase (BVP), caused by variable germination and leaf appearance rates, and two-thirds to variable duration of panicle induction after BVP. Water temperature was the main determinant of both sources of variability. A simulation model, describing these temperature and photoperiod effects on leaf number, growth duration and leaf appearance rates, was developed using the 1995 data, and satisfactorily validated with the 1996 data. The model was used to identify phenological-stage and cultivar-specific causes of variable crop duration.
Field Crops Research | 1998
M. Sié; Michaël Dingkuhn; M.C.S Wopereis; K.M. Miézan
Abstract Rice crop duration in tropical-arid, irrigated environments, such as the Sahel, varies strongly among seasons and years. For rice double-cropping systems, cultivars are needed that have a stable duration under variable daylengths and temperatures. No efficient selection tools are currently available to screen for comparatively thermo- and photoperiod-insensitive cultivars, and little is known about the genetic diversity of rice in this respect. A previous study presented a model that disaggregates photothermal effects on rice phenology for the different crop development stages and the two main factors, daylength and temperature. The present study characterizes differences in the photothermal response of 18 rice lines for three major phases of their development, namely, germination, the appearance of early leaves, and the induction phase (IP) between the end of the basic vegetative phase (BVP) and panicle initiation (PI). A field experiment was conducted at Ndiaye in Senegal, using 11 staggered sowing dates at 15 day intervals. Three check cultivars were replicated four times per date, and the others were not replicated. Phenological observations included leaf tip appearance rates on a daily basis, and heading and flowering dates. Water and air temperatures were also monitored. The duration from seed soaking to the appearance of the first leaf depended linearly on water temperature, with a base temperature of about 8°C. No differences were observed among lines. The appearance rate of the first to the fourth leaf had an optimum temperature ( T opt ) between 22°C and 25°C, with significant differences between lines. Lines with low T opt had high maximal leaf appearance rates during seedling stage. The quantitatively most important component of the seasonal variability of crop duration was IP, which depended on temperature and photoperiod. Photoperiodic and temperature effects were disaggregated using an empirically based model leaf appearance (LAP), which, by way of parametrization, helped quantify genotypic differences. The photothermal differences between lines were associated with adaptation to specific seasons. Lines such as IR13240-108-2-2-3, which is adapted to several seasons, were comparatively insensitive to photoperiod and temperature. That line also had a low T opt and a high Leaf Appearance. In conclusion, screening for temperature-insensitive leaf appearance rates may be promising for rice breeding for arid, irrigated environments. Selection for combined low thermal and photoperiod sensitivity, however, would be impractical on an experimental basis, and would therefore require genetic markers.
Archive | 1997
Folkard Asch; Michaël Dingkuhn; M.C.S Wopereis; Karl Dörffling; K.M. Miézan
Sodium uptake and distribution in rice was investigated in various field and screenhouse trials at WARDA’s research station in Ndiaye, Senegal. A conceptual model for sodium uptake and distribution was developed on the basis of the following results: (i) sodium uptake to the plant was transpiration driven; (ii) varieties differed in the way they regulated their stomata in relation to relative humidity and salt stress; (iii) sodium uptake was modulated at the root level by a ‘root filter’; and (iv) sodium was taken out of the transpiration stream and retained in the sheaths with the daily retention capacity as a varietal constant. The model describes the passive uptake of sodium to the plant and its distribution as a function of several varietal constants and transpiration. The root filter function for sodium, the maximum stem sodium retention and the sodium toxicity threshold in the leaves vary among varieties. Varietal differences in stomatal reactions to relative humidity and salt stress were implemented in the ORYZA_W evapotranspiration routine to simulate these reactions. The interactions between sodium and potassium are discussed in relation to available information from literature and preliminary results obtained from screenhouse studies. A concept of potassium distribution in the plant and its interaction with sodium uptake and distribution was included in the model structure.
Field Crops Research | 1999
M.C.S Wopereis; C Donovan; B Nebié; D Guindo; M.K N'Diaye
Field Crops Research | 2001
Folkard Asch; M.C.S Wopereis
Field Crops Research | 2000
Stephan M. Haefele; D.E. Johnson; S Diallo; M.C.S Wopereis; I Janin
Field Crops Research | 2004
D.E. Johnson; M.C.S Wopereis; D Mbodj; S Diallo; Stephen J. Powers; Stephan M. Haefele
Field Crops Research | 1999
C Donovan; M.C.S Wopereis; D Guindo; B Nebié
European Journal of Agronomy | 2001
S.M Haefele; M.C.S Wopereis; C. Donovan; J Maubuisson