Abstract

This paper describes the effects of Rht alleles in isogenic lines of Maringa spring wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) on number of grains per spike, average grain weight and weight of individual grains from different positions within the spike. Plants were grown under five environmental conditions in the field (in the 1991, 1992 and 1993 growing seasons, with two sowing dates in the first two years), aiming to determine causes of lower average grain weight commonly observed in semi-dwarf (SD) compared with standard-height (SH) cultivars. The number of grains per spike was significantly greater in SD and dwarf (DD) lines than in the SH line due to differences among lines in number of grains per spikelet. Therefore, the relative contribution of proximal grains was affected negatively by Rht alleles while the contribution of distal grains was affected positively. Average grain weight was reduced with increases in the dose of Rht alleles, and this trait was negatively correlated to number of grains per spike. To understand the possible causes of this negative relationship, individual grains from specific positions within the spike were analysed. Basal grains in central spikelets were heavier than those in near apical and near basal spikelets. Within central spikelets, the ranking of individual grain weights were grains 2 > 1 > 3 > 4, numbered from the most proximal to the most distal positions. Proximal grains (1 and 2) were heaviest in SH, lightest in DD, and intermediate in the SD line. In general, the relative differences between the lines were smaller than that found for the average of all grains of the spike, in particular when grains of different positions within the central spikelets were considered. For all these grains, differences in weight due to Rht alleles were due to differences in rate of grain filling, with the effective duration of grain filling being almost unchanged. An increased source-sink relationship did not significantly modify the weight of any of the analysed grains in SD and SH lines (and just slightly increased rate of grain filling in the DD line). Therefore, the smaller grains in SD and DD lines could hardly have been due to an increased competition for assimilates. Alternatively, SD and DD lines had a greater proportion of grains from distal positions than the SH line, and these grains were always smaller than proximal grains. The reduction in average grain weight produced by Rht alleles therefore was due to a combination of effects on the potential size of each grain and on the contribution of grains from distal positions within the spike, with no effects attributed to an increased competition for assimilates.

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