Quantifying rice spikelet sterility in potential heat-vulnerable regions: Field surveys in Laos and southern India
2015; Elsevier BV; Volume: 190; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.fcr.2015.08.006
ISSN1872-6852
AutoresTsutomu Ishimaru, Seefong Xaiyalath, Jagadeesh Selvam Nallathambi, Rajendran Sathishraj, Mayumi Yoshimoto, Lathvilayvong Phoudalay, Benjamin Samson, Toshihiro Hasegawa, Keiichi Hayashi, Gurusamy Arumugam, M. Raveendran, S. V. Krishna Jagadish,
Tópico(s)Genetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and Animals
ResumoGlobal warming is projected to cause yield losses due to heat-induced spikelet sterility (HISS) in hot, vulnerable rice-growing regions, but reports documenting HISS at a regional level in the tropics are very limited. As a case study, HISS at flowering stage was surveyed under field conditions using local popular varieties in Savannakhet, Laos, and Tamil Nadu, India, during the dry season. At the field site in Savannakhet, sterility in variety Thadokkham1 (TDK1) was 10.8% when the maximum average temperature at heading was 32.9 °C, which increased to 23.3% at 37.3 °C. When plots were covered with a shading net, solar radiation was reduced by 60% at heading, which significantly reduced sterility to 10.0%. Panicle temperature estimates produced with a micrometeorology model revealed that shading during the hours when flowering occurs decreased panicle temperature by 2.2–2.6 °C. At the field sites in Tamil Nadu, sterility of variety Coimbatore 51 (CO51) was highly correlated with the maximum temperature at heading; sterility was around 5–10% when maximum average temperature was below 36.5 °C, which increased to 33.4% at 38.0 °C. Marking of opened spikelets at hourly intervals allowed us to detect increases in sterility as temperature increased from early morning until noon. We conclude that HISS at flowering stage can occur in local popular varieties grown in Savannakhet and Tamil Nadu during the hot, dry season. Effective protocols such as using a shading net and hourly marking of open spikelets are useful approaches to quantifying HISS during flowering stage across hot and potential heat-vulnerable rice-growing regions.
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