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By author > Duhaubois Gilles

Assessment of the Global Warming effect on a wheat crop by using an Ecotron showed that not all the paradigms used to outline crop behaviour remain valid under future meteorological conditions
Vincent Leemans  1@  , Maurine Antoine, Yves Brostaux  2@  , Gilles Colinet  3, 4@  , Aurore Degré  5@  , Gilles Duhaubois, Pierre Delaplace  1@  , Benjamin Dumont, Sarah Garré, Rafiq Hamdi, Fatima Maghnia, Paul Kamba Malumba, Sebastien Massart  6@  , Jennifer Michel, Jérôme Pierreux, Abdul Saré, Hélène Soyeurt, Cécile Thonar, Bernard Longdoz@
1 : Unité de recherche TERRA [Gembloux]
2 : Statistique, Inform. et Mathém. appliquée à la bioingénierie - Gembloux Agro Bio Tech - Université de Liège
Passage des Déportés 2, 5030 Gembloux -  Belgium
3 : Liege University - Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech - TERRA research and teaching center
4 : Liege University - Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech - Water, Soil & Plant Exchanges
5 : Universite de Liege
6 : Laboratoire de Phytopathologie, Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech, Université de Liège  (GxABT-ULg)

Wheat is the third most worldwide cultivated cereal and the first one in Europe which represent 24% of the global production1,2. Global warming is predicted to significantly impact its production, slightly enhancing the yield in northern Europe but vastly increasing its variability3, 4.

These predictions are based on models fitted on the actual meteorological conditions. In this study, by using an Ecotron, a common wheat crop was submitted to two meteorological conditions, respectively representative of the present and of the future climate around the end of 21th century of western Europe under RCP 8.5. The aim of this experiment was to test the validity of validity of those claims.


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