Journal of Experimental Botany, Vol 49, 1519-1528, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press
P Jones, E Keane and B Osborne
In glasshouse studies of four alloplasmic wheat series, phenotypic
characters were least affected when the recipient parent cytoplasm was
replaced by donor cytoplasm of the S or D plasmatype. In the T.
aestivum cv. 'Selkirk' series, cytoplasm substitution did not
affect Pmax per unit leaf area, although the flag leaf
area (and photosynthetic rate per leaf) of each alloplasmic line was
greater than that of euplasmic 'Selkirk'. In field trials, all the D
plasmatype alloplasmics tested produced more ears
m-2 than did euplasmic 'Selkirk'. The increased
tiller number and leaf area of alloplasmic lines resulted in greater canopy
light interception than euplasmic 'Selkirk' early in the season. This
characteristic was associated with reduced weed populations under crops of
alloplasmic 'Selkirk' lines grown under low-, but not high-input, agronomic
regimes, with Ae. cylindrica- and Ae.
ventricosa-'Selkirk' significantly outyielding alloplasmic
'Selkirk' under low-input conditions. The F2 populations from crosses
between European wheat varieties and 'Selkirk' lines exhibited higher
standard deviations for grain yield for alloplasmic than for euplasmic
'Selkirk', suggesting potential for selecting heterotic nuclear-cytoplasmic
combinations with alien cytoplasms.Keywords: Alien
cytoplasmic variation, wheat, photosynthesis.
ARTICLES
Effects of alien cytoplasmic variation on carbon assimilation and productivity in wheat
Department of Plant Science, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland; Department of Botany, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland; Corresponding author; Fax: +353 21 274420; E-mail: p.jones@ucc.ie
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