Anum Iqbal, Beena Alam, Rashid Iqbal, Manal Abdulaziz Binobead, Mohamed S. Elshikh, Tolga İzgü, Temoor Ahmed
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Current research explores adult plant resistance (APR) to brown rust (leaf rust) in diverse bread wheat genotypes using morphological traits as indicators. Leaf rust disease was induced, and various parameters, including Area Under the Disease Progress Curve (AUDPC), Final Disease Severity % (FDS), and Coefficient of Infection (CI), were assessed, along with yield-related traits like Plant Height (PH), Peduncle Length (PL), Spikelets per Spike (SPS), Number of Grains per Spike (NGPS), Thousand-Grains Weight (TGW) and Grain Yield per Plant (GYP). The study reveals varying levels of resistance among genotypes. Genotypes G3, G5, G6, G7, G12, G15, G16, G19, G21, G22, G25, G26, G27, and G30 demonstrated strong resistance, with low values for FDS, AUDPC and CI. In contrast, Genotypes G1, G8, G18 and G28 were highly susceptible, exhibiting high values for these parameters, categorizing them as “S” (Susceptible). Correlation analysis unveiled strong positive associations between AUDPC and both FDS and CI, indicating increased disease severity with rising AUDPC values. Positive correlations were also found among yield-related traits. Conversely, yield and yield-related traits showed weak, non-significant and negative correlations with disease-related parameters. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) highlighted three significant Principal Components (PCs), with the first two (F1 and F2) explaining 73.74% of data variability. Furthermore, genotype clustering indicated varying genetic similarity levels. These findings offer valuable insights for genotype selection and breeding strategies, contributing to enhanced brown rust resistance in wheat.
期刊介绍:
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution is devoted to all aspects of plant genetic resources research. It publishes original articles in the fields of taxonomical, morphological, physiological, biochemical, genetical, cytological or ethnobotanical research of genetic resources and includes contributions to gene-bank management in a broad sense, that means to collecting, maintenance, evaluation, storage and documentation.
Areas of particular interest include:
-crop evolution
-domestication
-crop-weed relationships
-related wild species
-history of cultivated plants including palaeoethnobotany.
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution also publishes short communications, e.g. newly described crop taxa, nomenclatural notes, reports of collecting missions, evaluation results of gene-bank material etc. as well as book reviews of important publications in the field of genetic resources.
Every volume will contain some review articles on actual problems. The journal is the internationalized continuation of the German periodical Die Kulturpflanze, published formerly by the Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research at Gatersleben, Germany.
All contributions are in the English language and are subject to peer reviewing.