Research Article

Determination of Tolerant Genotypes Against Flood Stress in Spinach

Volume: 26 Number: 4 August 31, 2023
EN TR

Determination of Tolerant Genotypes Against Flood Stress in Spinach

Abstract

Abiotic stress factors generate negative effects on agricultural production daily. With the effect of global warming, the floods that have increased recently not only affected human life negatively but also caused great losses in plant development. For this reason, developing tolerant plants against flooding stress is the most critical approach reducing yield and quality losses. The present study aimed to determine the genotypes that are tolerant of flooding stress by using the agro-morphological and physiological characteristics of the commercial varieties and S5-level spinach breeding materials. In the study, 13-day flood stress was applied to 48 hybrid cultivars and 23 spinach genotypes at the S5 stage during the seedling period. As a result, in addition to the adverse effects of flood stress on plant growth, it was determined that the tolerance was different between genotypes. In the light of the results obtained, SWA0760 F1 among commercial varieties was found to be the most tolerant variety to flood stress. At the same time, genotypes 14, 9, 21, 15, 4 and 10 from breeding lines were promising genotypes that were tolerant to flooding stress. As a result, it is predicted that the inclusion of the genotypes used in the study as parents in hybrid cultivar breeding will make significant contributions to the development of tolerant cultivars against flood stress.

Keywords

References

  1. Arif, M., Jatoi, S. A., Rafique, T. & Ghafoor, A. (2013). Genetic divergence in indigenous spinach genetic resources for agronomic performance and implication of multivariate analyses for future selection criteria. J Sci Technol Dev, 32(1), 7-15.
  2. Arnell, N.W. & Liv, C. (2001). Hydrology and water resources. In: McCarthy, J.J., Canziani, O.F., Leary, N.A., Dokken, D.J., White, K.S. (Eds.), IPPC Climate Change 2001: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 191–233
  3. Bailey-Serres, J. & Chang, R. (2005). Sensing and signalling in response to oxygen deprivation in plants and other organisms. Annals of botany, 96(4), 507-518.
  4. Bange, M., Milroy, S. & Thongbai, P. (2004). Growth and yield of cotton in response to waterlogging. Field Crops Research, 88(2-3), 129-142.
  5. Bennett, J. (2003). Opportunities for increasing water productivity of CGIAR crops through plant breeding and molecular biology. Water productivity in agriculture: limits and opportunities for improvement (pp. 103-126). Wallingford UK: CABI publishing.
  6. Bhatt, R. M., Upreti, K. K., Divya, M., Bhat, S., Pavithra, C. & Sadashiva, A. (2015). Interspecific grafting to enhance physiological resilience to flooding stress in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.). Scientia Horticulturae, 182, 8-17.
  7. Boyer, J. S., James, R. A., Munns, R., Condon, T. A. & Passioura, J. B. (2008). Osmotic adjustment leads to anomalously low estimates of relative water content in wheat and barley. Functional Plant Biology, 35(11), 1172-1182.
  8. Brazel, S., Barickman, T. & Sams, C. (2021). Short-term waterlogging of kale (Brassica oleracea L. var. acephala) plants causes a decrease in carotenoids and chlorophylls while increasing nutritionally important glucosinolates. InVIII International Symposium on Human Health Effects of Fruits and Vegetables-FAVHEALTH 2021 1329 (pp. 175-180).

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Agricultural, Veterinary and Food Sciences

Journal Section

Research Article

Early Pub Date

May 15, 2023

Publication Date

August 31, 2023

Submission Date

March 4, 2022

Acceptance Date

June 1, 2022

Published in Issue

Year 2023 Volume: 26 Number: 4

APA
Dal, Y., Seymen, M., Uncu, A. Ö., Türkmen, Ö., & Arı, B. Ç. (2023). Determination of Tolerant Genotypes Against Flood Stress in Spinach. Kahramanmaraş Sütçü İmam Üniversitesi Tarım Ve Doğa Dergisi, 26(4), 754-766. https://doi.org/10.18016/ksutarimdoga.vi.1082694

Cited By


International Peer Reviewed Journal
Free submission and publication
Published 6 times a year



88x31.png


KSU Journal of Agriculture and Nature

e-ISSN: 2619-9149