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Strategic crossing of biomass and harvest index—source and sink—achieves genetic gains in wheat

Authors :
Abdelraheem H. A. Hussein
S. V. Sai Prasad
Seyed M. Tabib-Ghaffari
Gyanendra Pratap Singh
Khaled I. M. Gad
Ahmad R. Nikzad
Mohammad R. Jalal-Kamali
Mahboob A. Sial
Abdul Jabbar Khan
Asghar Mehraban
Eben von Well
Rudra Naik
Fernanda G González
William Hoppitt
Hans J. Braun
Gemma Molero
Gulzar Ahmad
Abdul Hakim
Kai Sonder
Carolina Saint Pierre
Araceli Torres
Thomas Payne
Mohamed Mokhtar Mohamed
Suma S. Biradar
Moses Ncala
Yei Nayeli Quiche
I. K. Kalappanavar
Makhdoom Hussain
Abdul Fatah A. Morad
G. S. Mavi
Kishor Panchabhai
Ravish Chatrath
Riaz Ud-Din
Ignacio I. Terrile
Indu Sharma
Ernesto Solís-Moya
Deepak Pandey
Manoochehr Khodarahmi
M. Dastfal
V. K. Mishra
Arun Balasubramaniam
Yann Manes
Zhonghu He
Miguel A. Camacho-Casas
Maher Maghraby
Pedro Figueroa-López
Hossein Akbari Moghaddam
Shesh R. Upadhyay
Muhammad Sohail
Pompiliu Mustatea
Dario Novoselovic
Javier Ireta-Moreno
ElHusseiny G. Galal
Adel Hagras
Ravi P. Singh
Stephan de Groot
Matthew P. Reynolds
Manzoor Hussain
Jorge I. Alvarado-Padilla
Amani A. M. Idris
Alberto Borbón-Gracia
Muhammad Imtiaz
Hassan Ghojogh
Izzat S. A. Tahir
Sivakumar Sukumaran
Uttam Kumar
Arun Kumar Joshi
Monsif U. Rehman
Virinder Singh Sohu
Jabbar Jafarby
Maqsood Qamar
Zheru Fan
Hala M. M. Elamein
Naresh Chandra Deb Barma
M. Y. Mujahid
A.J.D. Pask
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Verlag, 2017.

Abstract

To accelerate genetic gains in breeding, physiological trait (PT) characterization of candidate parents can help make more strategic crosses, increasing the probability of accumulating favorable alleles compared to crossing relatively uncharacterized lines. In this study, crosses were designed to complement “source” with “sink” traits, where at least one parent was selected for favorable expression of biomass and/or radiation use efficiency—source—and the other for sink-related traits like harvest-index, kernel weight and grains per spike. Female parents were selected from among genetic resources—including landraces and products of wide-crossing (i.e. synthetic wheat)—that had been evaluated in Mexico at high yield potential or under heat stress, while elite lines were used as males. Progeny of crosses were advanced to the F4 generation within Mexico, and F4-derived F5 and F6 generations were yield tested to populate four international nurseries, targeted to high yield environments (2nd and 3rd WYCYT) for yield potential, and heat stressed environments (2nd and 4th SATYN) for climate resilience, respectively. Each nursery was grown as multi-location yield trials. Genetic gains were achieved in both temperate and hot environments, with most new PT-derived lines expressing superior yield and biomass compared to local checks at almost all international sites. Furthermore, the tendency across all four nurseries indicated either the superiority of the best new PT lines compared with the CIMMYT elite checks, or the superiority of all new PT lines as a group compared with all checks, and in some cases, both. Results support—in a realistic breeding context—the hypothesis that yield and radiation use efficiency can be increased by improving source:sink balance, and validate the feasibility of incorporating exotic germplasm into mainstream breeding efforts to accelerate genetic gains for yield potential and climate resilience.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00142336
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e4e367e5da5346816f0c94458af2a0f4