Abstract

Key messageNovel QTL for salinity tolerance traits have been detected using non-destructive and destructive phenotyping in bread wheat and were shown to be linked to improvements in yield in saline fields.Soil salinity is a major limitation to cereal production. Breeding new salt-tolerant cultivars has the potential to improve cereal crop yields. In this study, a doubled haploid bread wheat mapping population, derived from the bi-parental cross of Excalibur × Kukri, was grown in a glasshouse under control and salinity treatments and evaluated using high-throughput non-destructive imaging technology. Quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis of this population detected multiple QTL under salt and control treatments. Of these, six QTL were detected in the salt treatment including one for maintenance of shoot growth under salinity (QG(1–5).asl-7A), one for leaf Na+ exclusion (QNa.asl-7A) and four for leaf K+ accumulation (QK.asl-2B.1, QK.asl-2B.2, QK.asl-5A and QK:Na.asl-6A). The beneficial allele for QG(1–5).asl-7A (the maintenance of shoot growth under salinity) was present in six out of 44 mainly Australian bread and durum wheat cultivars. The effect of each QTL allele on grain yield was tested in a range of salinity concentrations at three field sites across 2 years. In six out of nine field trials with different levels of salinity stress, lines with alleles for Na+ exclusion and/or K+ maintenance at three QTL (QNa.asl-7A, QK.asl-2B.2 and QK:Na.asl-6A) excluded more Na+ or accumulated more K+ compared to lines without these alleles. Importantly, the QK.asl-2B.2 allele for higher K+ accumulation was found to be associated with higher grain yield at all field sites. Several alleles at other QTL were associated with higher grain yields at selected field sites.

Highlights

  • Soil salinity is a significant abiotic stress that limits the production of cereal crops worldwide (Flowers et al 1997; Munns and Gilliham 2015; Rengasamy 2006; Roy et al 2014)

  • Three plants from each of 44 Australian bread wheat cultivars and one landrace were genotyped for a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) (X2279012.58AC) that was found to be linked with a shoot ion-independent tolerance Quantitative trait locus (QTL) on chromosome 7A (QG(1–5).asl-7A)

  • Non-destructive imaging technology was used to map QTL affecting salt tolerance sub-traits in a glasshouse experiment for a doubled haploid (DH) mapping population of hexaploid wheat

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Summary

Introduction

Soil salinity is a significant abiotic stress that limits the production of cereal crops worldwide (Flowers et al 1997; Munns and Gilliham 2015; Rengasamy 2006; Roy et al 2014).

Methods
Results
Conclusion

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