Abstract
A better understanding of responsiveness of time to anthesis to water stress in triticale and wheat might help to explain their differences in performance under stress and to identify which attributes or components of time to anthesis are most affected. Three experiments were carried out during the 2004 and 2005 growing seasons to (i) evaluate genotypic variability in phenology responsiveness to drought in triticale and to (ii) explore the variation in the duration of pre-anthesis phases occurring before and after the onset of stem elongation as well as their responsiveness to water stress. Important variation was found among triticale cultivars on time to anthesis, allowing classification of cultivars into long, intermediate and short cycle. Differences in the duration of the stem elongation phase (i.e. from terminal spikelet initiation (TS) to anthesis (ANT)) were as high as 200 °Cd for cultivars with similar time to flowering. Although water stress reduced the time to anthesis (in average by ca. 125 °Cd), cultivars showed a differential responsiveness to drought in phases occurring before or after TS. Some cultivars that were highly sensitive to drought in the emergence (Eme)–TS phase were insensitive in the phase TS–ANT and vice-versa. Water shortage tended to reduce the grain filling period and was most evident when a Mediterranean environment treatment was simulated.
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