Scientists Say New Computer Model Amounts to a Lot More Than a Hill of Beans

Computer modeling may help scientist develop crops that yield more with less water

Written byUniversity of Illinois
| 4 min read
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Crops that produce more while using less water seem like a dream for a world with a burgeoning population and already strained food and water resources. This dream is coming closer to reality for University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign researchers who have developed a new computer model that can help plant scientists breed better soybean crops.

Under current climate conditions, the model predicts a design for a soybean crop with 8.5 percent more productivity, but using 13 percent less water, and reflecting 34 percent more radiation back into space, by breeding for slightly different leaf distribution, angles and reflectivity. This work appears in the journal Global Change Biology.

“The model lets you look at one of those goals individually or all of them simultaneously,” said Praveen Kumar, a co-author of the study who is the Lovell Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Illinois. “There might be some areas where you look at only one aspect – if you’re in an arid zone, you can structure things to maximize the water efficiency. In other areas you may want to concentrate on food productivity.”

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