Crop-model assisted phenomics and genome-wide association study for climate adaptation of indica rice. 2. Thermal stress and spikelet sterility

Low night and high day temperatures during sensitive reproductive stages cause spikelet sterility in rice. Phenotyping of tolerance traits in the field is difficult because of temporal interactions with phenology and organ temperature differing from ambient. Physiological models can be used to separ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental botany 2017-07, Vol.68 (15), p.4389-4406
Hauptverfasser: Dingkuhn, Michael, Pasco, Richard, Pasuquin, Julie Mae, Damo, Jean, Soulié, Jean-Christophe, Raboin, Louis-Marie, Dusserre, Julie, Sow, Abdoulaye, Manneh, Baboucarr, Shrestha, Suchit, Kretzschmar, Tobias
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Low night and high day temperatures during sensitive reproductive stages cause spikelet sterility in rice. Phenotyping of tolerance traits in the field is difficult because of temporal interactions with phenology and organ temperature differing from ambient. Physiological models can be used to separate these effects. A 203-accession indica rice diversity panel was phenotyped for sterility in ten environments in Senegal and Madagascar and climate data were recorded. Here we report on sterility responses while a companion study reported on phenology. The objectives were to improve the RIDEV model of rice thermal sterility, to estimate response traits by fitting model parameters, and to link the response traits to genomic regions through genome-wide association studies (GWAS). RIDEV captured 64% of variation of sterility when cold acclimation during vegetative stage was simulated, but only 38% when it was not. The RIDEV parameters gave more and stronger quantitative trait loci (QTLs) than index variables derived more directly from observation. The 15 QTLs identified at P
ISSN:0022-0957
1460-2431
DOI:10.1093/jxb/erx250