ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Environ. Sci., 24 October 2022

Sec. Environmental Economics and Management

Volume 10 - 2022 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2022.1037979

Geographical detector-based wheat quality attribution under genotype, environment, and crop management frameworks

  • 1. Key Laboratory of Land Surface Pattern and Simulation, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

  • 2. Institute of Environment and Sustainable Development in Agriculture, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing, China

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Abstract

Elucidating the determining factors for wheat quality is an essential but complex task, influenced by wheat cultivars, environmental conditions, and management decisions. This study analyzed 285 winter wheat varieties, 13 wheat quality traits, and 9 influencing factors under a genotype, environment, and crop management framework by a geographical detector model in China’s main winter wheat-producing area. Our results revealed the attribution of wheat quality in the genotype × environment × crop management (G × E × M) interaction framework. The factors influencing wheat quality in China were ranked as follows: wheat cultivar > precipitation > Tmax > irrigation > soil type > Tmin > fertiliser > sunshine duration > landform. The wheat cultivar was the dominant factor affecting wheat quality, which explained 38.57%, 38.78%, and 28.13% of the variation in gluten index, stabilization time, and sedimentation index, respectively. In addition, the sensitivity of the wheat quality traits to the G × E × M interaction framework was detected. The wheat quality trait sensitivity ranked from the highest to the lowest followed the order gluten index > sedimentation index > hardness index > stabilisation time > seed moisture > crude protein > formation time > wet gluten > water absorption > landing value > flour output ratio > ash > capacity. Gluten and sedimentation were highly sensitive traits for wheat quality under the G × E × M interaction framework, with sensitivity index values of 66.94% and 58.11% in the G × E × M framework, respectively. Furthermore, we proposed an integrated improvement strategy for an end-use wheat quality trait based on the sensitivity of wheat quality traits in the G × E × M framework. The gluten index, crude protein, wet gluten, and hardness index should be prioritized according to wheat’s commercial value and sensitivity index. However, other quality traits with higher commercial importance, such as flour output ratio, capacity, and landing value, should be put behind the improvement list. Our result identified the critical factors for most wheat quality traits in the G × E × M framework. It extended the comprehensive strategy for wheat quality improvement.

1 Introduction

Elucidating the determining factors for wheat quality is an essential but complex task (Studnicki et al., 2016), which is necessary to ensure human nutrition safety and is also critical to many stakeholders in the agri-food chain, including farmers, agronomists, commodity traders, and policymakers (Paudel et al., 2021). Wheat quality improvement practices have historically focused on end-use traits with high commercial value, including crude protein, grain hardness (Surma et al., 2012), and milling and baking quality (Battenfield et al., 2018). However, from an agricultural system perspective, wheat quality is influenced by wheat cultivars, environmental conditions, and management decisions (Nuttall et al., 2017). Therefore, from an optimal efficiency perspective, an integrated strategy based on genotype × environment × crop management (G × E × M) interaction should be developed to improve wheat quality.

The influence of genotype and environment (G × E) has received significant attention as an essential strategy for improving wheat quality. Several interacting field experiments have qualitatively judged the driving forces of wheat quality. 39 spring wheat cultivars, 7 locations, and 12 major bread-making quality traits have been investigated in China. This revealed that genetic variance components mainly influenced kernel hardness, flour yield, and Zeleny sedimentation value. In contrast, test weight and the number of dropped grains were primarily influenced by environmental variations (Zhang et al., 2004). Another study tested the effect of G × E on yellow alkaline noodles quality using six Canadian wheat cultivars at three sites. Cooked durum noodle texture parameters were significantly affected by G × E, with the environment accounting for 66–71% of their variance (Hatcher et al., 2009). Protein content, sedimentation value, and loaf volume were measured through 20 wheat cultivars and 15 environmental factors in southeast Europe, and all three traits were more influenced by location than by year, with protein content and sedimentation value responding more strongly to changes in environmental conditions than loaf volume (Hristov et al., 2010). Wheat quality was examined for five winter wheat cultivars in Serbia from 2004 to 2006. Significant differences among genotype investigated years, location for sedimentation value, and wet gluten content was observed (Zecevic et al., 2009). Twenty-one wheat genotypes were evaluated under drought stress, and significant genotypic effects were found for gliadin, total protein content, and gliadin and gluten ratio, indicating genotypic variations for these traits; moreover, strong environmental influences of 89.65% and 89.06% were observed for gluten and glutenin, respectively (Thungo et al., 2020). In Latin America, 23 genotypes were cultivated in 20 environments distributed across nine sites in six countries. Large variability was observed for most of the evaluated wheat quality features, with a more extensive range of quality parameters in different environments than among genotypes, even for parameters primarily determined by genotypes (Vázquez et al., 2012). Furthermore, several field experiments have qualified the effect of a single factor on wheat quality, such as rainfall (Garrrido-Lestache et al., 2004), water deficit (Zhao et al., 2009), high temperature (Singh et al., 2010), fertilization (Lin et al., 2012; Luo et al., 2019), and low temperature (Liu et al., 2019). The importance of the environmental factors for grain quality has been previously demonstrated, suggesting that breeders’ quality objectives should be adapted to the target environment (Vázquez et al., 2012).

There is limited research on the dependency of wheat quality on genotype × environment × crop management (G × E × M) interactions (Wang and Frei, 2011) through complex experimental designs. Seven cultivars were cultivated at three locations under two crop management levels in Poland, and the results showed that the area significantly affected the protein content. Fertilizer application levels may substantially increase protein content (Rozbicki et al., 2015). Fifteen spring wheat genotypes and two crop management levels at seven locations were evaluated, and grain protein was substantially influenced by crop management and genotype. Still, unfavorable soil conditions had a significant effect (Studnicki et al., 2016). An experiment was conducted for winter wheat in the North China Plain to examine the interaction mechanisms between two temperature increases (1.4 and 2.3°C) and tillage (conventional and no-tillage) treatments. However, only a temperature increase was found to significantly increase nitrogen, protein, and carbon contents and reduce the C/N ratio (Li et al., 2020). Twenty-four winter wheat genotypes, four locations, and two fertilizer application levels were evaluated in Poland, and it was found that genotype had a significant effect on only grain hardness. Moreover, the environment was dominant for protein content, wet gluten, and Zeleny sedimentation value. In contrast, for starch content, the alveograph W parameter and hectolitre weight sources of variation had the same importance (Surma et al., 2012). Fifteen wheat genotypes, three locations, and two levels of nitrogen fertilizer application were used to assess the impacts on wheat quality. Wet gluten, sedimentation value, and stabilization time were controlled by location, followed by genotype and nitrogen fertilizer (Jin et al., 2019). The development of field experiments of single-factor, G × E, and G × E × M revealed some driving forces of wheat quality trait responses. However, limited by the number of factors arranged in a field experiment, environmental factors are usually simplified by location and year. Therefore, it is difficult to determine the quantitative contribution rate of whole factors in the G × E × M framework to wheat quality in single or multi-factor field experiments.

In order to improve the quality of wheat more efficiently, on the one hand, the contribution of various factors in the G × E × M Framework to wheat quality indicators needs to be deeply understood. In contrast, it is necessary to identify which of the many wheat quality indicators are sensitive to changes in factors under the G × E × M Framework, especially those with high commercial value. In this regard, this study attempted to fill the research gaps by 1) introducing a new method to quantitatively describe the contribution of the G × E × M framework to wheat quality traits; and 2) assessing the sensitivity of wheat quality traits to each factor under the G × E × M framework. The study results can assist in developing a comprehensive strategy for efficiently improving wheat quality.

2 Material and methods

2.1 Study area

The main winter wheat-producing area of China (29°24´–42°36´ N, 110°21´–122°42´ E) accounts for 38% of the total sown area and more than 50% of the winter wheat yield. This area mainly included Hebei, Henan, Shandong, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Anhui, Hubei, and Jiangsu, with a total area of 5 million ha, arable land accounts for approximately 0.26 million ha (Figure 1). The region is a core agricultural production area in China, and its predominantly warm temperate monsoon climate shows a distinct season with coinciding rain and heat. As a result, it is dry and cold in spring and winter, while high temperatures and rainfall characterize summers. The accumulated temperature above 10°C is 3,400–4,700°C, annual precipitation is 500–900 mm, and interannual precipitation variation is relatively large (Sun et al., 2017).

FIGURE 1

2.2 Wheat sampling and quality measurement

The wheat quality traits used in this study include grain quality (hardness index, capacity, crude protein, seed moisture, and landing value), flour quality (flow output ratio, sedimentation index, ash, wet gluten, and gluten index), and dough quality (water absorption, formation time, and stabilization time) (Table 1). All 787 wheat samples were collected by large-scale grain producers in 204 counties from main winter wheat-producing areas, who need to provide quality data to the processing enterprises that purchase wheat. The weight of each wheat sample shall not be less than 2 kg, and the geographic location of the sample and the wheat variety information shall be provided. The Grain and Product Quality Supervision, Inspection, and Testing Centre of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs (Taian and Zhengzhou) tested all those wheat samples. The results have been published in the 2017 and 2018 China wheat quality reports (MOMA, 2017; Zhang and Zhao, 2018).

TABLE 1

TaxonomyWheat quality traitsCommercial valueMinimumMaximumMeanS.D.
GrainHardness indexMedium39.0079.0064.286.09
Capacity (g/L)Medium714.00849.00795.6323.67
Crude Protein (%, dry-based)High9.9019.8014.411.40
Seed moisture (%)Medium8.1012.5010.700.71
Landing value (s)Medium0.00834.00363.1672.32
FlourFlow output ratio (%)Medium56.3075.0067.662.83
Sedimentation index (mL, 14% wet-based)Low15.0061.0031.367.00
Ash (%, dry-based)Low0.001.010.540.13
Wet gluten (%, 14% wet-based)High19.7049.8032.354.10
Gluten indexHigh13.0099.0071.8317.57
DoughWater absorption (g/ml)Low49.8069.8059.653.24
Formation time (min)Medium1.2035.704.354.18
Stabilisation time (min)Medium0.8044.807.677.40

Descriptive statistics of wheat quality traits.

S.D. standard deviation.

2.3 Potential driving factor selection and data sources

Nine influences from the three driving forces were selected based on the existing literature, including genotype (wheat cultivar), management (irrigation and fertilizer), and environment (precipitation, maximum temperature, minimum temperature, soil type, terrain, and sunshine duration) (Table 2).

TABLE 2

No.Driving forcesInfluence factorsReferenceData source
1GenotypeWheat cultivarVázquez et al. (2012); Sanchez-Garcia et al. (2015)National wheat quality survey
2ManagementIrrigation(Soil moisture)Singh et al. (2010); Zhao et al. (2009); Rozbicki et al. (2015)Global irrigation area map (GIAM) from http://www.iwmigiam.org
3FertilizerGarrrido-Lestache et al. (2004); Luo et al. (2019)Agricultural Statistical Yearbook
4EnvironmentsPrecipitationGarrrido-Lestache et al. (2004)Weather station observation
5Maximum temperatureSingh et al. (2010)Weather station observation
6Minimum temperatureSingh et al. (2010); Liu et al. (2019)Weather station observation
7Soil typeStudnicki et al. (2016)The Second National Soil Survey in China
8TerrainRozbicki et al. (2015)Digital Elevation Model (DEM)
9Sunshine durationLiu et al. (2019)Sunshine duration

Factors used to analyze the driving forces of wheat quality.

2.3.1 Wheat variety

The 285 winter wheat varieties included weakened gluten (5), all-purpose types (181), medium gluten (61), and strong gluten (39), which were cultivated in the study area during 2017–2018 (MOMA, 2017; Zhang and Zhao, 2018). As shown in Figure 1, the spatial distribution of wheat varieties followed a uniform pattern. The weak gluten varieties were distributed in the southeast region of the principal winter wheat-producing area. In contrast, the strong gluten varieties were located south of the main winter wheat-producing area. The spatial distribution of all-purpose types was relatively uniform.

2.3.2 Management measures

The distribution of the two management factors, including fertilizer application and irrigation, is shown in Figures 2A,B. The county-level fertilizer maps show that the central part of the main winter wheat-producing area is a high-value area for fertilizer application, and the surrounding mountainous region is relatively low-value. The primary winter wheat-producing area has three irrigation water sources: surface water, groundwater, and combined usage. However, most agricultural areas are irrigated using groundwater (Yang et al., 2021), and rain-fed agricultural areas are distributed over the surrounding mountainous regions.

FIGURE 2

Irrigation data were obtained from the Global Irrigation Area Map (GIAM; Thenkabail et al., 2009). County-level fertilizers were calculated by multiplying the number of total nitrogen fertilizers by the quotient of the wheat sown area and the total planted area acquired from the Agricultural Statistics Yearbook of 2017 and 2018 (MOMA, 2017; Zhang and Zhao, 2018).

2.3.3 Environmental factors

The weather, soil, and terrain factors are shown in Figures 2C–H. The terrain of the main winter wheat-producing areas is high in the west and low in the east, and the eastern part of the terrain is mainly plain. The northern plains have less precipitation and higher temperatures. The wheat planting area consists primarily of semi-hydrated and artificial soils.

The meteorological data were acquired from the China Meteorological Administration, and used to calculate cumulative precipitation, average maximum temperature, average minimum temperature, and cumulative sunshine hours of winter wheat during the filling period in the main winter wheat-producing areas. The data on the filling period of winter wheat in different locations was obtained from the Atlas of Agroclimatic Resources in China (Mei, 2015). Soil data were obtained from the Second National Soil Census of China. Topographic data were obtained from a 1 × 1 km digital elevation model.

2.4 Geographical detector model

The geographical detector model (GDM) is a statistical method that can detect spatial heterogeneity and reveal the driving forces behind it and was developed by Wang Jingfeng (Wang and Hu, 2012). Model principle literature, application guide, and free software for GDM are available at http://www.geodetector.org.

The GDM is a powerful tool for driving forces, factors, and spatial analyses, which has some distinct advantages over classical statistical methods. For example, the GDM model does not require linearity assumptions; instead, spatial effects are considered (Wang et al., 2016), and the relationship between Y and X established by the GDM is more reliable than classical regression (Wang and Xu, 2017). Furthermore, none of the potential factors in the model analysis need to consider the problem of multicollinearities (Zhou et al., 2018). Finally, GDM can rank the deterministic power of each factor and describe its change over time (Ding et al., 2019). Therefore, it has been widely used in many research topics of natural and social sciences, including public health (Wang et al., 2010), land use (Ju et al., 2016), PM2.5 (Wang et al., 2021), air quality index (Zhan et al., 2018), heavy metals (Wu et al., 2021), carbon emissions (Zhang and Zhao, 2018), and soil erosion (Wang et al., 2019), and has also gradually been adopted in agroecological efficiency studies (Liao et al., 2021). However, although GDM has been applied in various research fields, it has rarely been utilized to analyze wheat quality factors.

A factor detector method in the GDM was used to measure the spatially stratified heterogeneity of the geographic variable Y to comprehensively analyze the correlation between wheat quality and the selected influencing factors (Figure 3). The GeoDetector q value is defined as follows (Wang et al., 2016):where is the mean of stratum h, is the mean of the population, is the variance of stratum h, is the variance of the population. SSW and SST denote the internal and total sum of squares, respectively (Wang et al., 2016; Wang and Xu, 2017).

FIGURE 3

For , high q values indicate more robust spatially stratification heterogeneity of Y. When stratification is defined by factor X, q means that factor X can explain 100 × q% of the spatial pattern of Y. Factor X must be a categorical variable to calculate the q value. If Factor X is a continuous variable, it needs to be categorized using expert knowledge or categorization algorithms, such as equal intervals, natural breaks, quantization, geometrical intervals, and k-means (Wang and Xu, 2017). p-values were used for significance testing (Wang et al., 2016). The natural breaks method was used to classify continuous variables in main winter wheat-producing areas.

2.5 Sensitivity index of wheat quality traits based on the geographical detector model

In GDM, one q-value represents the determined power of one factor in the G × E × M framework to one winter wheat quality trait. Therefore, for specific winter wheat quality traits, the sum of the q-value of all factors in the G × E × M framework could indicate the response degree of wheat quality trait, namely the sensitivity of wheat quality trait to the G × E × M framework. The sensitivity index of wheat quality trait is developed as follows:Where is the sensitivity index of the specific quality indicator of wheat; is the sum of q-value of the determined power of all factors in G × E × M framework to specific wheat quality indicator, including wheat varieties, irrigation, fertilizer, precipitation, Tmax, Tmin, soil type, terrain, and sunshine duration; and n = 1,2, … ,9.

3 Results

3.1 Factor detection for wheat quality

The q statistical results showed that wheat cultivar is the dominant factor affecting wheat quality. Wheat cultivar explained 38.57%, 38.78%, and 28.13% of the spatial variation in gluten index, stabilization time, and sedimentation index, respectively, contributing to three other wheat quality traits: crude protein, formation time, and hardness index (Figure 4).

FIGURE 4

Precipitation was the second most influential factor for wheat quality. The q value of precipitation was significant for 10 of the 13 wheat quality traits, thus, indicating that precipitation plays a vital role in most wheat quality traits. For example, for the hardness index and wheat quality seed moisture, the precipitation q-values reached 10.65% and 10.66%, respectively.

Tmax was the third influencing factor of wheat quality, which affected nine of the 13 wheat quality traits. The q value of Tmax exceeded 8% for the hardness index, gluten index, and seed moisture.

Irrigation, soil type, and Tmin affected 7–9 of the 13 wheat quality traits. Less influential driving forces were fertilizer, sunshine duration, and landform, with landform influencing only one wheat quality trait and having a low q-value.

According to the results of the GDM detection factors, the factors influencing wheat quality in China were ranked as follows: wheat cultivar > precipitation > Tmax > irrigation > soil type > Tmin > fertiliser > sunshine duration > landform (Figure 4).

3.2 Sensitivity index of the wheat quality trait in the G × E × M framework

Based on

Figure 5

, the sensitivity of wheat quality traits in the G × E × M framework was divided into three groups:

  • 1) High sensitivity group: Gluten and sedimentation indices, which are highly sensitive traits for wheat quality, exceeded 50% in the G × E × M framework, reaching 66.94% and 58.11%, thus, indicating that wheat’s gluten index and sedimentation index were more susceptible to the G × E × M framework than other factors. As shown in Figure 5, wheat cultivar, precipitation, Tmax, and irrigation played an essential role in forming wheat gluten and sedimentation indices.

  • 2) Moderately sensitive group: Hardness index, stabilization time, seed moisture, crude protein, formation time, and wet gluten were moderately sensitive traits for wheat quality, with sensitivity indices ranging from 20% to 50% in the G × E × M framework. Among these traits, crude protein, wet gluten, and hardness index were essential quality features for the planned use of wheat, and they showed relatively sensitive reflections to G × E × M factors (Figure 5). The wheat cultivar mainly controlled the dough stabilization time.

  • 3) Low-sensitivity group: Water absorption, landing value, flour output ratio, ash content, and capacity were the low-sensitive traits of wheat quality, and the sensitivity indices in the G × E × M framework were less than 20%. In particular, the sensitivity indices of capacity and ash were close to zero, indicating that the formation of power and ash in wheat quality was almost random and not influenced by the G × E × M framework.

FIGURE 5

According to the sensitivity index based on the GDM, the consequences of wheat quality trait sensitivity ranked from the highest to the lowest were gluten index (0.6694) > sedimentation index (0.5811) > hardness index (0.4923) > stabilisation time (0.4468) > seed moisture (0.4459) > crude protein (0.3743) > wet gluten (0.2115) > formation time (0.2044) > water absorption (0.1714) > flour output ratio (0.1407) > landing value (0.0918) > ash (0.0343) > capacity (0).

3.3 Strategy for wheat quality improvement under the G × E × M framework

According to Figures 4, 5, three fundamental development principles must be proposed to improve wheat quality in the G × E × M framework. First, high-sensitivity traits of wheat quality should be prioritized, implying that adjusting influencing factors could effectively affect these sensitive traits. Second, wheat quality traits having high sensitivity and as few factors in the G × E × M framework as possible should be selected. Third, commercially recognized or practically necessary characteristics should be chosen. This can be summarized as high sensitivity, few influencing factors, and high value. Therefore, a 3D coordination relationship consisting of a sensitivity index, number of influencing factors, and a commercial value was established in the G × E × M interaction framework to decide the priority strategy for wheat quality improvement.

As shown in Figure 6, in the G × E × M interaction framework, the gluten index was located in the relatively high priority zone with high importance and received the highest priority in wheat quality improvement. In addition, crude protein and wet gluten were situated in the middle area, having high volume and ranked second in wheat quality improvement. Subsequently, the hardness index, seed moisture, stabilization time, and sedimentation index were located in the medium zone with medium importance and could be considered for wheat quality improvement and ranked third. In conclusion, the priority strategies for wheat quality improvement were gluten index > crude protein and wet gluten > hardness index, seed moisture, stabilization time, sedimentation index > water absorption, flour output ratio, landing value, ash, and capacity.

FIGURE 6

4 Discussion

The GDM was employed to explore the driving forces behind the wheat quality of main winter wheat-producing areas in China by measuring and comparing the spatially stratified heterogeneity of wheat quality. (Figure 4). The factors influencing wheat quality in China were ranked as follows: wheat cultivar > precipitation > Tmax > irrigation > soil type > Tmin > fertiliser > sunshine duration > landform. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first time that the magnitude of the quantitative dependency of wheat quality on all of the factors in the G × E × M framework has been reported. The wheat cultivar was the dominant factor for wheat quality in the main winter wheat-producing areas, explaining 38.57%, 38.78%, and 28.13% of gluten index, stabilization time, and sedimentation index, respectively. These results suggested that genotype is a critical driving force behind the spatial distribution of wheat quality, while precipitation and Tmax also contribute significantly to wheat quality. These results were consistent with those of Vázquez et al. (2012). They found that genotype was the main factor determining wheat quality in 23 genotypes cultivated in 20 environments at nine locations in six countries. Furthermore, Studnicki et al. (2016) reported that genotype and crop management have substantially influenced the grain protein content of wheat. Our results expanded the knowledge on influencfactors to wheat quality under the G × E × M framework.

As shown in Figure 6, a new strategic approach was proposed to evaluate candidate wheat quality traits by high sensitivity, few influencing factors, and high commercial value to decide the priority for quality trait improvement. The gluten index, which represents the amount of high-quality gluten, was the most preferred trait for improving wheat quality. Crude protein and wet gluten were ranked as the second priority. Further, some traits of great commercial value, such as flour output ratio and capacity, ranked low as these two traits are not sensitive to the G × E × M interaction framework, which is hugely challenging to improve the flour output ratio and capacity in wheat quality. To some content, our results explain some of the current wheat quality improvement strategies. For example, much research on improving wheat crude protein was reported (Surma et al., 2012), while there are few reports on improving flour output ratio.

Usually, more than three influencing factors in a field trial to identify impacts wheat quality was a considerable challenge. In our study, the technical pathway using GDM provides a quantitative evaluation scheme by comparing the spatial distribution characteristics of wheat quality and factors in the G × E × M framework and analysing the matching of the spatial distribution pattern to determine the influences of 9 factors in G × E × M framework. 13 sensitivity indices of wheat quality traits based on the q-value from GDM were also obtained. Therefore, the GDM method is an extension of the limitation of the field test method to evaluate the effect of influencing factors in the G × E × M framework on wheat quality (Figure 5).

The results of GDM showed that fertilizer, sunshine duration, and landform were minor factors affecting wheat quality (Figure 5). In general, fertilizer is a critical factor in agricultural production. For example, a 28-year fertilizer application experiment showed that long-term fertilizer application significantly influenced grain protein content, dry gluten content, and wet gluten content (Lin et al., 2012). However, in our study, the primary winter wheat-producing area is one of China’s most developed agricultural production areas. Further, management parameters, such as fertilizer application and land leveling, reached a relatively saturated state. As shown in Figures 2A,B, all wheat varieties were primarily located in similar fertilization and landform areas in the principal winter wheat-producing area, which explains why fertilizer and landform were not the influencing factors for spatial variations in wheat quality. The contribution of influencing factors with saturated supply may be underestimated, and this may be a limitation of GDM.

5 Conclusion

Our study revealed the factors influencing wheat quality in China as well as the sensitivity of wheat quality traits to the G × E × M framework. Moreover, based on the sensitivity of wheat quality traits in the G × E × M framework, an integrated strategy for wheat quality traits was proposed wherein the gluten index, crude protein, wet gluten, and hardness index should be prioritized over other quality traits with higher commercial importance, such as flour output ratio, capacity, and landing value, according to wheat’s commercial value and sensitivity index. This study identified the critical factors influencing most wheat quality traits in the G × E × M framework and further expanded the comprehensive strategy for wheat quality improvement.

Statements

Data availability statement

The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.

Author contributions

All authors read and approved the final version of the manuscript. XM conceived of the study. XZ designed the methodology, conducted the analysis, and wrote the first draft of the manuscript. YL reviewed and edited the manuscript. HJ supervised the correct implementation of the methodology and interpretation of the results.

Funding

This study was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2019YFA0607403 and No. 2021xjkk0903), National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 32171561 and No. 32271638).

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher’s note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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Summary

Keywords

wheat quality improvement, comprehensive strategy, winter wheat, geographical detector model, China

Citation

Zhang X, Ma X, Li Y and Ju H (2022) Geographical detector-based wheat quality attribution under genotype, environment, and crop management frameworks. Front. Environ. Sci. 10:1037979. doi: 10.3389/fenvs.2022.1037979

Received

07 September 2022

Accepted

10 October 2022

Published

24 October 2022

Volume

10 - 2022

Edited by

Ghaffar Ali, Shenzhen University, China

Reviewed by

Endang Retno Wedowati, Universitas Wijaya Kusuma Surabaya, Indonesia

Sawaid Abbas, University of the Punjab, Pakistan

Updates

Copyright

*Correspondence: Xin Ma,

This article was submitted to Environmental Economics and Management, a section of the journal Frontiers in Environmental Science

Disclaimer

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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