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      Growth Responses of Wheat (Triticum aestivumL. var. HD 2329) Exposed to Ambient Air Pollution under Varying Fertility Regimes

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          Abstract

          The problem of urban air pollution has attracted special attention in India due to a tremendous increase in the urban population; motor vehicles vis a vis the extent of energy utilization. Field studies were conducted on wheat crops (Triticum aestivum L. var. HD 2329) by keeping the pot-grown plants in similar edaphic conditions at nine different sites in Allahabad City to quantify the effects of ambient air pollution levels on selected growth and yield parameters. Air quality monitoring was done at all the sites for gaseous pollutants viz. SO 2, NO 2, and O 3. Various growth parameters (plant height, biomass, leaf area, NPP, etc.) showed adverse effects at sites receiving higher pollution load. Reduction in test weight and harvest index was found to be directly correlated with the levels of pollutant concentrations. The study clearly showed the negative impact of air pollution on periurban agriculture.

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          Most cited references18

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          Growth of continental-scale metro-agro-plexes, regional ozone pollution, and world food production.

          Three regions of the northern mid-latitudes, the continental-scale metro-agro-plexes, presently dominate global industrial and agricultural productivity. Although these regions cover only 23 percent of the Earth's continents, they account for most of the world's commercial energy consumption, fertilizer use, food-crop production, and food exports. They also account for more than half of the world's atmospheric nitrogen oxide (NOx,) emissions and, as a result, are prone to ground-level ozone (O(3)) pollution during the summer months. On the basis of a global simulation of atmospheric reactive nitrogen compounds, it is estimated that about 10 to 35 percent of the world's grain production may occur in parts of these regions where ozone pollution may reduce crop yields. Exposure to yield-reducing ozone pollution may triple by 2025 if rising anthropogenic NOx emissions are not abated.
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            Ambient Ozone and Plant Health

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              Ozone-induced oxidative stress: Mechanisms of action and reaction

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ScientificWorldJournal
                ScientificWorldJournal
                TSWJ
                The Scientific World Journal
                TheScientificWorldJOURNAL
                2356-6140
                1537-744X
                2003
                20 August 2003
                : 3
                : 799-810
                Affiliations
                Lab of Air Pollution and Global Climatic Change, Department of Botany, Allahabad Agricultural Institute- Deemed University, Allahabad- 211 007, India
                Author notes

                Academic Editor: William J. Manning

                Article
                618274
                10.1100/tsw.2003.64
                5974883
                12941977
                76ea9854-b4f4-470a-b4bd-91dd052a3972
                Copyright © 2003 Anoop Singh et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Funding
                Funded by: Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
                Categories
                Research Article

                Uncategorized
                air pollution,fertility level,plant growth,total biomass,yield,triticum aestivum
                Uncategorized
                air pollution, fertility level, plant growth, total biomass, yield, triticum aestivum

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