Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15)

Previous research showed a correlation in the ability to uptake water from drying soil and shoot biomass production in Urochloa hybrids (Jimenez et al, 2016). The ability to uptake water in drying soil is associated with a larger and deeper root system in Urochloa grasses (Cardoso et al., 2015). Bearing that into mind, drought resistance in Urochloa grasses has been defined as the ability to produce more biomass under water-limiting conditions. Due to improvements in off-the-shelf imaging sensors and image analyses, routine estimation of visible total root length and deep rooting (root length at depth below 60cm of soil surface) is now a reality (Cardoso and Rao, 2019). However, such estimations are not straightforward. Maximum rooting depth (i.e., length of the longest visible root) holds promise for its use as a proxy for deep rooting. The following work aimed to evaluate the variation in dry mass, water uptake, maximum rooting depth, deep rooting and total root length of 84 hybrids of Urochloa hybrids after three weeks of growth under well-watered and water-limiting conditions. We hypothesized that hybrids with larger and deeper roots systems could extract more water in drying soil which in turn is reflected in greater shoot dry mass production. We also hypothesized that maximum rooting depth could be used as a surrogate measurement of deep rooting. Pearson correlation, simple and multiple linear regressions were calculated to test the relationship between individual and combination of root traits upon shoot biomass. Broad sense heritability was calculated for each trait and watering to test their relevance and suitability for screening purposes.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cardoso, Juan Andrés
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT 2021-09
Subjects:genotypes, drought resistance, biomass, root length, hybrids, genotipos, resistencia a la sequía, biomasa, híbridos, Urochloa,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115900
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1159002023-03-19T05:01:16Z Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15) Cardoso, Juan Andrés genotypes drought resistance biomass root length hybrids genotipos resistencia a la sequía biomasa híbridos Urochloa Previous research showed a correlation in the ability to uptake water from drying soil and shoot biomass production in Urochloa hybrids (Jimenez et al, 2016). The ability to uptake water in drying soil is associated with a larger and deeper root system in Urochloa grasses (Cardoso et al., 2015). Bearing that into mind, drought resistance in Urochloa grasses has been defined as the ability to produce more biomass under water-limiting conditions. Due to improvements in off-the-shelf imaging sensors and image analyses, routine estimation of visible total root length and deep rooting (root length at depth below 60cm of soil surface) is now a reality (Cardoso and Rao, 2019). However, such estimations are not straightforward. Maximum rooting depth (i.e., length of the longest visible root) holds promise for its use as a proxy for deep rooting. The following work aimed to evaluate the variation in dry mass, water uptake, maximum rooting depth, deep rooting and total root length of 84 hybrids of Urochloa hybrids after three weeks of growth under well-watered and water-limiting conditions. We hypothesized that hybrids with larger and deeper roots systems could extract more water in drying soil which in turn is reflected in greater shoot dry mass production. We also hypothesized that maximum rooting depth could be used as a surrogate measurement of deep rooting. Pearson correlation, simple and multiple linear regressions were calculated to test the relationship between individual and combination of root traits upon shoot biomass. Broad sense heritability was calculated for each trait and watering to test their relevance and suitability for screening purposes. 2021-09 2021-11-09T08:53:31Z 2021-11-09T08:53:31Z Report Cardoso, J.A. (2021) Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15). Cali (Colombia): Alliance of Bioversity and CIAT. 6 p. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115900 en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access 6 p. application/pdf Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic genotypes
drought resistance
biomass
root length
hybrids
genotipos
resistencia a la sequía
biomasa
híbridos
Urochloa
genotypes
drought resistance
biomass
root length
hybrids
genotipos
resistencia a la sequía
biomasa
híbridos
Urochloa
spellingShingle genotypes
drought resistance
biomass
root length
hybrids
genotipos
resistencia a la sequía
biomasa
híbridos
Urochloa
genotypes
drought resistance
biomass
root length
hybrids
genotipos
resistencia a la sequía
biomasa
híbridos
Urochloa
Cardoso, Juan Andrés
Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15)
description Previous research showed a correlation in the ability to uptake water from drying soil and shoot biomass production in Urochloa hybrids (Jimenez et al, 2016). The ability to uptake water in drying soil is associated with a larger and deeper root system in Urochloa grasses (Cardoso et al., 2015). Bearing that into mind, drought resistance in Urochloa grasses has been defined as the ability to produce more biomass under water-limiting conditions. Due to improvements in off-the-shelf imaging sensors and image analyses, routine estimation of visible total root length and deep rooting (root length at depth below 60cm of soil surface) is now a reality (Cardoso and Rao, 2019). However, such estimations are not straightforward. Maximum rooting depth (i.e., length of the longest visible root) holds promise for its use as a proxy for deep rooting. The following work aimed to evaluate the variation in dry mass, water uptake, maximum rooting depth, deep rooting and total root length of 84 hybrids of Urochloa hybrids after three weeks of growth under well-watered and water-limiting conditions. We hypothesized that hybrids with larger and deeper roots systems could extract more water in drying soil which in turn is reflected in greater shoot dry mass production. We also hypothesized that maximum rooting depth could be used as a surrogate measurement of deep rooting. Pearson correlation, simple and multiple linear regressions were calculated to test the relationship between individual and combination of root traits upon shoot biomass. Broad sense heritability was calculated for each trait and watering to test their relevance and suitability for screening purposes.
format Report
topic_facet genotypes
drought resistance
biomass
root length
hybrids
genotipos
resistencia a la sequía
biomasa
híbridos
Urochloa
author Cardoso, Juan Andrés
author_facet Cardoso, Juan Andrés
author_sort Cardoso, Juan Andrés
title Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15)
title_short Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15)
title_full Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15)
title_fullStr Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15)
title_full_unstemmed Genotypic variation in drought resistance among Urochloa Hybrids (population Br15)
title_sort genotypic variation in drought resistance among urochloa hybrids (population br15)
publisher Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT
publishDate 2021-09
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115900
work_keys_str_mv AT cardosojuanandres genotypicvariationindroughtresistanceamongurochloahybridspopulationbr15
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