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Breeding corn to boost yields has made it more vulnerable to heat

As temperatures rise due to climate change, the huge amounts of corn grown in the US Midwest could be under threat, and it seems breeding for high-yielding varieties has made the crop genetically more vulnerable

By James Dinneen

6 July 2023

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Corn could be vulnerable to climate change

DAVID PAPAZIAN PHOTOGRAPHY/Getty Images

A century of breeding corn to boost yields in the US Midwest may have also made the crop more vulnerable to the hotter temperatures expected with climate change.

The amount of corn grown in the US during the 20th century due to a combination of breeding, agricultural intensification and favorable temperatures. But hotter and drier weather projected to arrive due to climate change threatens to slow or even reverse those gains.

鈥淚t鈥檚 fairly severe,鈥 says at Iowa State University. 鈥淚f you look at middle-of-the-road projections, corn yield goes down.鈥 The worst scenarios project as much as a 50 per cent decrease in yield by 2100.

To investigate whether corn breeders can develop more hardy variants, Schnable and his colleagues looked at data from corn-growing trials in four Midwestern states conducted between 1934 and 2014, along with temperature data from the same years. The trials involved nearly 5000 different varieties, enabling the researchers to track the influence of both climate and breeding on yield.

They found that after decades of breeding, corn varieties became more tolerant of moderately hot temperatures between 32C and 34C (89.6藲F and 93.2藲F). However, many varieties became less tolerant of severe heat above 38C (100.4藲F), suggesting a genetic trade-off between breeding for a 20th-century climate and a 21st-century one.

鈥淭he trade-off in there is bad news if you鈥檙e in a high heat area,鈥 says team member at Iowa State University, though exactly why it occurs is unclear, he says.

Such severe heat is rare in the Corn Belt, but could become more frequent with climate change, says at the University of Minnesota. The fact that corn adapts differently to moderate and severe heat shows that 鈥渢he exact magnitude of warming is going to make a really big difference鈥, he says.

While the trade-off suggests breeding varieties that can tolerate both moderate and severe heat will be more challenging, the amount of genetic variation in response to temperature means careful breeding or genetic engineering could address this vulnerability. 鈥淢aize is so adaptable,鈥 says Schnable. 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty extraordinary.鈥

Journal reference

PLoS Genetics DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1010799

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