4.5 Article

Relationship of grain yield with carbon isotope discrimination and ash content in lines derived from a bread wheat cultivar

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
Volume 143, Issue -, Pages 275-282

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0021859605005356

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The objective was to explore, in lines derived from a bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivar, the association of grain yield with carbon isotope discrimination (Delta) and ash content (Ash) determined in both flag leaf and kernel. Divergent selection within the cv. Nestos, based on individual plant yield under very low density (11 547 plants/ha), produced 20 lines. Progeny evaluation was conducted in two sites of Northern Hellas (Greece) at both low (11 547 plants/ha) and high (5 000 000 plants/ha) density. The results showed significant differences between lines for grain yield, Delta and Ash. However, only the conclusions on grain yield were similar in low and high density, perhaps because the selection criterion under low density was grain yield. This, combined with the lack of any strong relationship of grain yield with either Delta or Ash, failed to confirm the usefulness of these physiological traits as indirect selection criteria, when the within-cultivar variation for grain yield is exploited. The possible association of grain yield with Delta and Ash appeared to be influenced by various factors such as drought, level of grain yield and altitude. Results also showed that less plant-to-plant variability, as expressed by the coefficients of variation (CV) of single-plant yields, was associated with decreased drought response and higher yield stability. The less stressed lines were those that used water more conservatively till anthesis and maintained a high photosynthetic rate during grain filling.

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