Productivity in Great Plains acid soils of wheat genotypes selected for aluminium tolerance

被引:0
|
作者
J.P. Johnson Jr
B.F. Carver
V.C. Baligar
机构
[1] DeKalb Genetics Corporation,Department of Agronomy
[2] Oklahoma State Univ.,undefined
[3] USDA-ARS,undefined
[4] Appalachian Soil and Water Conservation Research Laboratory,undefined
来源
Plant and Soil | 1997年 / 188卷
关键词
acid soil tolerance; Al tolerance; selection; Triticum aestivum L.; wheat;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Soil acidity in the Great Plains of the USA can reduce forage and grain yields of winter wheat, primarily by Al toxicity. Indigenous cultivars may vary in seedling tolerance to Al toxicity, but the benefit that Al tolerance provides to forage and grain production is not well documented in this region. Backcrossed-derived lines of ‘Chisholm’ and ‘Century’ were selected with an additional gene from ‘Atlas 66’ conferring Al tolerance in solution culture. Our objective was to determine the impact of this source of Al tolerance on forage production prior to the jointing stage and subsequent grain yield. Experiments were conducted at several locations on non-limed (pH=4.5–4.7) and limed soils (pH=5.2-6.1) in Oklahoma. Two cultivars (‘TAM 105’, susceptible; ‘2180’, tolerant) with extreme differences in Al tolerance were used as controls . In limed conditions, forage and grain production did not differ between Al-tolerant and -susceptible genotypes, indicating a neutral effect of the Atlas 66 gene in the absence of Al toxicity. Despite visual differences in early-season plant vigor in non-limed acid soil, the Al-tolerant selections did not yield greater season-long forage than their susceptible parents. At sites where Al saturation in the non-limed soil exceeded 30%, spike production at maturity was nearly doubled in the Century background by the addition of Al tolerance, but final grain yield was not significantly improved. In the Chisholm background, grain yield was improved 50 to 74% by Al tolerance. The magnitude of the agronomic benefit of Al tolerance was highly influenced by the edaphic environment and genetic background. Acid soils of the Great Plains appear highly variable in Al toxicity; hence, consideration of the target environment is essential to predict the potential impact of Al tolerance selected in solution culture.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 106
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Productivity in Great Plains acid soils of wheat genotypes selected for aluminium tolerance
    Johnson, JP
    Carver, BF
    Baligar, VC
    PLANT AND SOIL, 1997, 188 (01) : 101 - 106
  • [2] Sunflower water productivity in four Great Plains soils
    Tolk, Judy A.
    Howell, Terry A.
    FIELD CROPS RESEARCH, 2012, 127 : 120 - 128
  • [3] Closely related winter wheat cultivar performance in US Great Plains acid soils
    Gillespie, Christopher J.
    Marburger, David A.
    Carver, Brett F.
    Zhang, Hailin
    AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 2020, 112 (05) : 3704 - 3717
  • [4] Response to lime and phosphorus of wheat genotypes with different tolerance to aluminium
    De Freitas, JG
    Cantarella, H
    Camargo, CED
    Ferreira, AWP
    Pettinelli, A
    Ramos, VJ
    Felicio, JC
    PESQUISA AGROPECUARIA BRASILEIRA, 2000, 35 (03) : 557 - 566
  • [5] SALICYLIC ACID MEDIATED HEAT STRESS TOLERANCE IN SELECTED BREAD WHEAT GENOTYPES OF PAKISTAN
    Kousar, Rehana
    Qureshi, Rahmatullah
    Jalal-Ud-Din
    Munir, Mubashrah
    Shabbir, Ghulam
    PAKISTAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2018, 50 (06) : 2141 - 2146
  • [6] Meteorological limits to winter wheat productivity in the US southern Great Plains
    Lollato, Romulo P.
    Edwards, Jeffrey T.
    Ochsner, Tyson E.
    FIELD CROPS RESEARCH, 2017, 203 : 212 - 226
  • [7] Cropping sequence affects wheat productivity on the semiarid northern Great Plains
    Miller, PR
    Waddington, J
    McDonald, CL
    Derksen, DA
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCE, 2002, 82 (02) : 307 - 318
  • [8] DIFFERENTIAL RESPONSE OF WHEAT GENOTYPES TO PHOSPHORUS IN ACID SOILS
    SOON, YK
    JOURNAL OF PLANT NUTRITION, 1992, 15 (05) : 513 - 526
  • [9] Carbon isotope ratios of great plains soils and in wheat-fallow systems
    Follett, RF
    Paul, EA
    Leavitt, SW
    Halvorson, AD
    Lyon, D
    Peterson, GA
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 1997, 61 (04) : 1068 - 1077
  • [10] Carbon isotope ratios of Great Plains soils and in wheat-fallow systems
    USDA-ARS, Ft. Collins, United States
    Soil Sci Soc Am J, 4 (1068-1077):