Differential responses of field pea (Pisum sativum L.) to ascochyta blight (Mycosphaerella pinodes): rating disease in the field
O. R. Vignolio, O. N. Fernández and N. O. Maceira
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 50(4) 601 - 615
Abstract
Lotus glaber Mill. is a herbaceous legume, tolerant to
flooding, that in a few decades has colonised the Flooding Pampa grasslands,
an extensive wetland of 90 000 km in central-east Argentina. In this study,
the growth and nodulation of flooded plants in 5 local populations were
evaluated. Thirty-day-old seedlings, grown in pots, were flooded outdoors
during 4 months. Stem, leaf, and root biomass, as well as the number of
nodules per plant, were lower in flooded plants than in non-flooded ones. In
flooded plants, the submerged portions of stems were hypertrophied and
populations differed in the proportion of plants with adventitious roots.
Flood tolerance was significantly related to the proportion of plants with
adventitious roots in stems of each population. A positive relationship was
shown between the proportion of plants with adventitious root and number of
nodules per plant. The plants were also tolerant of low temperatures and
ice-sheeting of water. These results underline the importance of morphological
adaptations related to the maintenance of plant functionality under flooding
conditions. The results provide evidence of the existence of characters
related to flooding tolerance, which should be taken into account in
ecological studies and agronomic selection programs.
Full text doi:10.1071/A98012
© CSIRO 1999





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