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Effects of dwarfing genes on yield and yield components under irrigated and rainfed conditions in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)
Authors:M. Nizam Uddin  D. R. Marshall
Affiliation:(1) Plant Breeding Institute, I.A. Watson Wheat Research Centre, The University of Sydney, P.O. Box 219, 2390 Narrabri, N.S.W., Australia;(2) Present address: Department of Agronomy, Waite Agricultural Research Institute, 5064 Glen Osmond, S.A., Australia
Abstract:Summary Near-isogenic tall (no dwarfing gene), semidwarf (Rht1 or Rht2) and dwarf (Rht1 + Rht2 or Rht3) spring wheat lines were evaluated for yield and yield components under irrigated and rainfed conditions. Under irrigated conditions, the dwarf and the semidwarf lines exhibited a significant yield advantage over the tall lines. Under rainfed conditions, the semidwarf lines outyielded the tall as well as the dwarf lines. Percent yield reduction in response to drought stress was highest with the dwarfs and lowest with the tall lines. Dry matter production of the tall lines and that of the semidwarf lines did not differ significantly and both produced significantly more dry matter than the dwarf lines under irrigated as well as rainfed conditions. Plant height and kernel weight decreased with increasing degree of dwarfness while number of kernels per spikelet, harvest index and days to heading increased under both moisture regimes. The dwarfing genes did not have any significant influence on number of tillers/m2 and spikelets per spike in either moisture regime.
Keywords:Triticum aestivum  wheat  dwarfing genes  drought stress  yield  yield components
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