Abstract

Drought is a recurring phenomenon that puts crop yields at risk and threatens the livelihoods of many people around the globe. Stay-green is a drought adaption phenotype found in sorghum and other cereals. Plants expressing this phenotype show less drought-induced senescence and maintain functional green leaves for longer when water limitation occurs during grain fill, conferring benefits in both yield per se and harvestability. The physiological causes of the phenotype are postulated to be water saving through mechanisms such as reduced canopy size or access to extra water through mechanisms such as deeper roots. In sorghum breeding programs, stay-green has traditionally been assessed by comparing visual scores of leaf senescence either by identifying final leaf senescence or by estimating rate of leaf senescence. In this study, we compared measurements of canopy dynamics obtained from remote sensing on two sorghum breeding trials to stay-green values (breeding values) obtained from visual leaf senescence ratings in multienvironment breeding trials to determine which components of canopy development were most closely linked to the stay-green phenotype. Surprisingly, canopy size as estimated using preflowering canopy parameters was weakly correlated with stay-green values for leaf senescence while postflowering canopy parameters showed a much stronger association with leaf senescence. Our study suggests that factors other than canopy size have an important role in the expression of a stay-green phenotype in grain sorghum and further that the use of UAVs with multispectral sensors provides an excellent way of measuring canopy traits of hundreds of plots grown in large field trials.

Highlights

  • Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) is a crop widely grown in drought-prone areas around the world and is mainly used in human and animal nutrition, as fiber or for ethanol production [1]

  • Similar heritabilities have been found for max-normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and postflowering parameters in wheat [25, 27]

  • The different findings are a result from the broader range of germplasm used in this study and suggest that traits influencing water capture or water use efficiency may play a greater role in the expression of the stay-green phenotype in this material than maximum canopy size

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Summary

Introduction

Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) is a crop widely grown in drought-prone areas around the world and is mainly used in human and animal nutrition, as fiber or for ethanol production [1]. It is the fifth most important cereal crop in the world and provides food for more than 750 million people in the semiarid tropical regions of Asia, Africa, and Latin America [2]. Population growth in combination with climate change is a challenge for the world’s future food security [3] This demands crops with traits that contribute to tolerance of water deficit. Introgressing stay-green QTLs into a senescent sorghum line resulted in a smaller leaf canopy due to reduced tillering or smaller leaves

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