info:eu-repo/semantics/article
A comprehensive study of spike fruiting efficiency in wheat
Fecha
2020-05Registro en:
Pretini, Nicole; Terrile, Ignacio Ismael; Gazaba, Luciana N.; Donaire, Guillermo M.; Arisnabarreta Dupuy, Sebastián; et al.; A comprehensive study of spike fruiting efficiency in wheat; Crop Science Society of America; Crop Science; 60; 3; 5-2020; 1541-1555
0011-183X
1435-0653
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Pretini, Nicole
Terrile, Ignacio Ismael
Gazaba, Luciana N.
Donaire, Guillermo M.
Arisnabarreta Dupuy, Sebastián
Vanzetti, Leonardo Sebastián
González, Fernanda Gabriela
Resumen
Spike fruiting efficiency (FE), defined as grains per unit of spike dry weight at anthesis (SDWa) is a promising trait for improving grain number (GN) in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). It is often estimated at maturity as the grains per unit of chaff or FE at maturity (FEm). The fertile floret efficiency (FFE), defined as fertile florets per unit of SDWa, and grain set (GST), or the number of grains per floret, were studied to better understand FE determination for the first time. Two double haploid populations designed by crossing modern cultivars contrasting for FE [‘Baguette 19’ and ‘Baguette Premium 11’(high FE) × ‘BioINTA2002’ (low FE)] were sown in five environments. The FE and FEm showed an unstable correlation (low or high) among genotypes within environments (caused by variable SDWa–chaff associations), resulting in a worse correlation between GN and FEm than between GN and FE. Therefore, the use of FEm as a surrogate for FE to improve GN may yield lower gains than those expected if FE were used. The narrow-sense heritability of FFE was high but the variability in fertile florets per spike among genotypes within environments was correlated with FFE only in the environments with high SDWa. Despite the close association between FE and FFE, the former was not totally set at anthesis, as GST greatly affected FE and GN. Selecting for higher FFE and GST, where genotype × environment effects determine heavy spikes at anthesis, is an alternative to breeding for improved GN.