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The origin of six-rowed ‘wild’ barley from the western Himalaya
Authors:P. J. Murphy  J. R. Witcombe  P. R. Shewry  B. J. Miflin
Affiliation:(1) School of Plant Biology, University College of North Wales, Bangor, Gwynedd, UK;(2) Department of Biochemistry, Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts, UK;(3) Present address: Department of Biology, The Open University, Walton Hall, MK7 6AA Milton Keynes, UK;(4) Present address: ICARDA, PO Box 5466, Aleppo, Syria
Abstract:Summary Plants were grown from seed of two-rowed wild barley, Hordeum spontaneum, and six-rowed brittlerachised barley. H. agriocrithon, collected in Ladakh, north-western India. Whereas the H. spontaneum remained true to type, segregation for morphological characters was observed in progeny rows grown from heads of H. agriocrithon plants. The H. agriocrithon heads also showed segregation for a biochemical character, the polypeptide pattern of the endosperm storage protein fraction (hordein). The H. agriocrithon seed therefore originated from natural hybridization between cultivated H. vulgare and weedy H. spontaneum. Crosses of H. vulgare and H. spontaneum gave progeny which resembled H. agriocrithon and showed similar hordein polypeptide segregation patterns. The results indicate that six-rowed brittle-rach ised barleys from the Himalayas have a similar origin to forms found in the Middle East, and that H. agriocrithon does not play a direct role in the evolution of barley.
Keywords:Hordeum agriocrithon  Hordeum spontaneum  wild barley  collection  Himalaya  hybridization  hordein  electrophoresis
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