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Relationship between genetic variability of flowering traits and Fusariummycotoxin contamination in oats

Authors :
Herrmann, Matthias Heinrich
Hautsalo, Juho
Georgieva, Paulina
Bund, Adalbert
Winter, Mark
Beuch, Steffen
Source :
Crop Science; March 2020, Vol. 60 Issue: 2 p852-862, 11p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Over the last three decades, Fusariuminfections and related mycotoxin contamination have caused significant economic losses in oats (Avena sativaL.). Breeding for resistance is highly prioritized in oats, but infection processes and resistance components against Fusariumspecies are not fully identified. In this study, the genetic variation for flowering traits and its impact on mycotoxin accumulation in oats is described. The first experiment of this paper was focused on flowering traits in 50 oat genotypes (Panel 1) to identify cleistogamic oats. Then, two separate Fusarium‐inoculated experiments in three (Panel 2 with 25 genotypes) and two environments (Panel 3 with 16 genotypes) were conducted to assess the relationship between the degree of anther retention (AR) and resistance to Fusariuminfestation and mycotoxin accumulation in oats. Panel 2 was inoculated with Fusarium culmorum, F. langsethiae, and F. sporotrichioides, and Panel 3 was inoculated with either F. graminearumor F. culmorum. The assessment of open flowering score and AR displayed a continuous variation from dominating chasmogamy to complete cleistogamy. Significant differences for deoxynivalenol and T‐2 were found, with a modest correlation between both mycotoxins. The lowest mycotoxin levels were found in two old and one modern cultivar, and the highest levels were found in a dwarf oat cultivar. Compared with plant height, AR was a rather ambiguous factor for the mycotoxin content, and it interfered with effects of other traits displaying high ranges such as earliness, lodging, or hull content. To unravel components of resistance to Fusariumin oats more precisely, specific populations with lower ranges in plant height and heading date should be studied.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0011183X and 14350653
Volume :
60
Issue :
2
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Crop Science
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs53218549
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/csc2.20125