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Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions

Four early-generation backcross populations (BC1F2) derived from one common recipient parental background, Weed Tolerant Rice 1 (‘WTR1’), and four different donor parents (‘Y134’, ‘Zhong 143’, ‘Khazar’, and ‘Cheng Hui-448’) were tested to identify suitable donor and recipient parents for weed compet...

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Autores principales: Dimaano, Niña Gracel B., Ali, Jauhar, Cruz, Pompe C. Sta., Baltazar, Aurora M., Diaz, Maria Genaleen Q., Acero, Bart L., Li, Zhikang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Weed Science Society of America 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7797629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33583962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/wsc.2017.57
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author Dimaano, Niña Gracel B.
Ali, Jauhar
Cruz, Pompe C. Sta.
Baltazar, Aurora M.
Diaz, Maria Genaleen Q.
Acero, Bart L.
Li, Zhikang
author_facet Dimaano, Niña Gracel B.
Ali, Jauhar
Cruz, Pompe C. Sta.
Baltazar, Aurora M.
Diaz, Maria Genaleen Q.
Acero, Bart L.
Li, Zhikang
author_sort Dimaano, Niña Gracel B.
collection PubMed
description Four early-generation backcross populations (BC1F2) derived from one common recipient parental background, Weed Tolerant Rice 1 (‘WTR1’), and four different donor parents (‘Y134’, ‘Zhong 143’, ‘Khazar’, and ‘Cheng Hui-448’) were tested to identify suitable donor and recipient parents for weed competitiveness and to standardize evaluation of the weed-competitive ability in rice. ‘GSR IR2-6’ (G-6) derived from a backcross of WTR1/Y134//WTR1 was selected as the best population and was advanced for phenotypic experiments in the 2014 dry season. The introgression lines (ILs) derived from the G-6 population were evaluated for seed germination and seedling vigor in greenhouse conditions and for weed-competitive ability under field conditions (upland weed-free, upland weedy, and lowland weedy). Parents and checks were included for comparison. Selection pressure for weed competitiveness was relatively stronger in upland conditions than in lowland conditions. After three rounds of selection and based on their relative grain yield performances across conditions, a total of 21 most-promising introgression fixed lines showing superior traits and weed-competitive ability were identified. G-6-L2-WL-3, G-6-RF6-WL-3, G-6-L15-WU-1,G-6-Y16-WL-2, and G-6-L6-WU-3 were the top ILs in lowland weedy conditions, whereas G-6-Y7-WL-3, G-6-Y6-WU-3, G-6-Y3-WL-3, and G-6-Y8-WU-1 were the highest yielding in upland weedy conditions. The use of weed-competitive rice cultivars in African and Asian countries will be a highly effective strategy to reduce production costs and provide alternative solutions to the unavailability of herbicides. Competitive rice varieties will also significantly improve grain yields in aerobic rice systems and can become an important strategy for successful upland rice production. Nomenclature: Rice, Oryza sativa L.
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spelling pubmed-77976292021-02-12 Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions Dimaano, Niña Gracel B. Ali, Jauhar Cruz, Pompe C. Sta. Baltazar, Aurora M. Diaz, Maria Genaleen Q. Acero, Bart L. Li, Zhikang Weed Sci Article Four early-generation backcross populations (BC1F2) derived from one common recipient parental background, Weed Tolerant Rice 1 (‘WTR1’), and four different donor parents (‘Y134’, ‘Zhong 143’, ‘Khazar’, and ‘Cheng Hui-448’) were tested to identify suitable donor and recipient parents for weed competitiveness and to standardize evaluation of the weed-competitive ability in rice. ‘GSR IR2-6’ (G-6) derived from a backcross of WTR1/Y134//WTR1 was selected as the best population and was advanced for phenotypic experiments in the 2014 dry season. The introgression lines (ILs) derived from the G-6 population were evaluated for seed germination and seedling vigor in greenhouse conditions and for weed-competitive ability under field conditions (upland weed-free, upland weedy, and lowland weedy). Parents and checks were included for comparison. Selection pressure for weed competitiveness was relatively stronger in upland conditions than in lowland conditions. After three rounds of selection and based on their relative grain yield performances across conditions, a total of 21 most-promising introgression fixed lines showing superior traits and weed-competitive ability were identified. G-6-L2-WL-3, G-6-RF6-WL-3, G-6-L15-WU-1,G-6-Y16-WL-2, and G-6-L6-WU-3 were the top ILs in lowland weedy conditions, whereas G-6-Y7-WL-3, G-6-Y6-WU-3, G-6-Y3-WL-3, and G-6-Y8-WU-1 were the highest yielding in upland weedy conditions. The use of weed-competitive rice cultivars in African and Asian countries will be a highly effective strategy to reduce production costs and provide alternative solutions to the unavailability of herbicides. Competitive rice varieties will also significantly improve grain yields in aerobic rice systems and can become an important strategy for successful upland rice production. Nomenclature: Rice, Oryza sativa L. Weed Science Society of America 2017-11-01 2017 /pmc/articles/PMC7797629/ /pubmed/33583962 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/wsc.2017.57 Text en © Weed Science Society of America, 2017 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative CommonsAttribution licence, which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Dimaano, Niña Gracel B.
Ali, Jauhar
Cruz, Pompe C. Sta.
Baltazar, Aurora M.
Diaz, Maria Genaleen Q.
Acero, Bart L.
Li, Zhikang
Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions
title Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions
title_full Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions
title_fullStr Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions
title_short Performance of Newly Developed Weed-Competitive Rice Cultivars under Lowland and Upland Weedy Conditions
title_sort performance of newly developed weed-competitive rice cultivars under lowland and upland weedy conditions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7797629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33583962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/wsc.2017.57
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