4.7 Article

Foliar resistance to ozone injury in the genetic base of US and Canadian soybean and prediction of resistance in descendent cultivars using coefficient of parentage

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FIELD CROPS RESEARCH
卷 111, 期 3, 页码 207-217

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.fcr.2008.12.005

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Ancestor; Coefficient of parentage; Foliar injury; Ozone tolerance; Soybean

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Development of ozone (O(3)) resistant cultivars is a potentially important approach for maintaining crop productivity tinder future climate scenarios in which tropospheric O(3) pollution is projected to rise. A first step in the breeding of resistant cultivars for a crop Such as soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) is identification of sources of O(3) resistance genes. Thirty ancestral lines of soybean were screened for differences in O(3) foliar injury under greenhouse conditions. The ancestors represented 92% of the genetic base of North American soybean as determined by pedigree analysis. Injury among ancestors ranged from 5 to 50% of leaf area, based oil response of the live oldest main stem leaves, indicating both the presence of substantial genetic variation for O(3) injury among the ancestors as well as resistance levels greater than that of the standard control cultivar, resistant Essex (15% injury). Ancestral types Fiskeby 840-7-3 and Fiskeby III exhibited the greatest foliar resistance and PI 88788 the least. A subsequent field Study confirmed the foliar resistance of the Fiskeby types. Resistant ancestors identified here are proposed for inheritance and DNA mapping studies to determine the genetic basis of foliar resistance. Because the presence of O(3)-resistant ancestors suggested that resistant descendents may exist in addition to the resistant control Essex. a method was developed to facilitate their identification. A predicted O(3)-resistance score Was calculated for 247 Publicly released Cultivars, based on pedigree analysis and ancestral response to ozone. Using this approach, the 32 public cultivars most closely related to resistant ancestors and, thus, most likely to be resistant were identified as priority candidates for future screening efforts. Predicted scores from the analysis suggested that cultivars from the Midwest may be more sensitive to foliar injury, on average, than Southern cultivars. (C) Published by Elsevier B.V.

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