4.3 Article

Phenotyping for resistance to pre-harvest sprouting in grain sorghum

Journal

SEED SCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 178-187

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0960258521000076

Keywords

germination; grain dormancy; grain sorghum; phenotyping; plant stature; pre-harvest sprouting; Sorghum bicolor

Categories

Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica (ANPCyT) [PICT 2017-4039]
  2. ADVANTA Semillas S.A.I.C.

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Pre-harvest sprouting is a common threat to cereal crops, with factors such as low seed dormancy and glume or panicle morphology influencing susceptibility. Laboratory testing found an inhibitory effect of glumes on germination and low levels of seed dormancy in high tannin backgrounds.
Pre-harvest sprouting (PHS) is a common threat to cereal crops in which the grain maturation phase takes place under rainy, moist conditions. Susceptibility to PHS is higher in sorghum genotypes displaying low levels of seed dormancy before harvest maturity. Other attributes such as glume or panicle morphology may also affect susceptibility to PHS. Breeding for resistance to PHS in grain sorghum requires the identification of grain physiological and morphological attributes affecting this trait, and a protocol for phenotyping and rating genotypes according to their susceptibility to PHS. In this work, we tested germination under laboratory conditions using detached grains and intact panicles for a panel of 20 sorghum genotypes including 11 parental lines, 6 hybrids and 3 reference inbred lines with contrasting PHS response. Records for natural sprouting in the field for these genotypes were also included in the analysis. Multivariate analyses of germination data allowed separation of genotypes into two major categories (resistant and susceptible to PHS). Laboratory germination data correlated significantly with PHS in the field. In most genotypes, the glumes had a significant, inhibitory effect on germination. The low levels of grain dormancy were observed among high tannin backgrounds, and vice versa, indicating that a pigmented testa alone does not provide resistance to PHS. Altogether, the phenotyping protocol allowed the classification of sorghum genotypes according to their susceptibility to PHS and the identification of different attributes useful for breeding for PHS resistance in this crop.

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