Yanling Chen
China Agricultural University
11 Papers
27 Citations
Yanling Chen is an academic researcher from China Agricultural University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nitrogen & Soil classification. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications. Previous affiliations of Yanling Chen include Qingdao Agricultural University.
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Papers
Modern maize hybrids in Northeast China exhibit increased yield potential and resource use efficiency despite adverse climate change
Xiaochao Chen,Fanjun Chen,Yanling Chen,Qiang Gao,Xiaoli Yang,Lixing Yuan,Fusuo Zhang,Guohua Mi +7 more
TL;DR: Maize breeding programs in the future should pay more attention to cope with the limiting climate factors specifically, and tolerate the climatic changes mainly by constitutively optimizing plant productivity.
Effects of nitrogen application rate on grain yield and grain nitrogen concentration in two maize hybrids with contrasting nitrogen remobilization efficiency
Yanling Chen,Changxin Xiao,Dali Wu,Tingting Xia,Qinwu Chen,Fanjun Chen,Lixing Yuan,Guohua Mi +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of N application rate on post-silking N uptake, vegetative N remobilization, GY, and GNC of two high-yielding maize hybrids, ZD958 and XY335, was investigated.
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Characterization of the plant traits contributed to high grain yield and high grain nitrogen concentration in maize
Yanling Chen,Changxin Xiao,Xiaochao Chen,Qian Li,Jie Zhang,Fanjun Chen,Lixing Yuan,Guohua Mi +7 more
TL;DR: It is supposed that higher NRE together with higher N and DM accumulation are the target traits to improve the modern stay-green cultivars to increase GNC without penalty in GY in the area of northeast China.
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Effect of different drip fertigation methods on maize yield, nutrient and water productivity in two-soils in Northeast China
TL;DR: In this paper, a two-year field experiment was conducted to evaluate the potential of different drip fertigation methods for increasing maize yield, and water and nutrient use efficiency in sandy and clay soil.
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Changes in root size and distribution in relation to nitrogen accumulation during maize breeding in China
TL;DR: In this article, the root growth, nitrogen uptake, dry matter accumulation and yield formation of six maize hybrids released from 1973 to 2000 in China were compared under low and high nitrogen supply in a black soil in Northeast China.
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