Abstract

Water deficit is one of the major limitations to food production worldwide and most climate change scenarios predict an aggravation of the situation. To face the expected increase in drought stress in the coming years, breeders are working to elucidate the genetic control of barley growth and productivity traits under water deficit. Barley is known as a relatively drought tolerant crop and genetic variability was observed for drought tolerance traits. The objectives of the present study were the quantification of morphological and physiological responses in a collection of 209 spring barley genotypes to drought stress, and the genetic analysis by genome-wide association study to find quantitative trait loci (QTL) and the allele contributions for each of the investigated traits. In six pot experiments, 209 spring barley genotypes were grown under a well-watered and water-limited regime. Stress phases were initiated individually for each genotype at the beginning of tillering and spiking for the vegetative- and the generative stage experiments, respectively, and terminated when the transpiration rates of stress treatments reached 10% of the well-watered control. After the stress phase, a total of 42 productivity related traits such as the dry matter of plant organs, tiller number, leaf length, leaf area, amount of water soluble carbohydrates in the stems, proline content in leaves and osmotic adjustment of corresponding well-watered and stressed plants were analysed, and QTL analyses were performed to find marker-trait associations. Significant water deficit effects were observed for almost all traits and significant genotype x treatment interactions (GxT) were observed for 37 phenotypic traits. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) revealed 77 significant loci associated with 16 phenotypic traits during the vegetative stage experiment and a total of 85 significant loci associated with 13 phenotypic traits during the generative stage experiment for traits such as leaf area, number of green leaves, grain yield, harvest index and stem length. For traits with significant GxT interactions, genotypic differences for relative values were analysed using one way ANOVA. More than 110 loci for GxT interaction were found for 17 phenotypic traits explaining in many cases more than 50% of the genetic variance.

Highlights

  • Water deficit is one of the most significant yield-reducing factors worldwide, [1] and agriculture is globally a major water consumer worldwide [2]

  • Significant genotypic differences were found for all phenotypic traits, indicating a broad variability amongst the genotypes investigated in this study

  • Significant water deficit effects were observed for parameters such as total plant dry mass (DM), total leaf area (LA, vegetative experiments), dry mass of green leaves (DMGL, vegetative experiments), proline content (PROL), osmotic potential (OP), relative leaf water content (RWC), the stalk dry mass (DMS, vegetative experiment), specific transpiration rate (ST, vegetative experiments) and the length of the main stem (Lms, vegetative experiments)

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Summary

Introduction

Water deficit is one of the most significant yield-reducing factors worldwide, [1] and agriculture is globally a major water consumer worldwide [2]. Most climate change scenarios suggest an increase in temperature, which will lead to an increase of aridity and water scarcity in many regions of the world [3, 4]. The increase of the world population leads to an increase of water and food demands [5]. Risks and consequences of climate change as well as the need for improved cultivars to face water limitations were addressed since the last century [6, 7]. Genetic variability for plant variety improvement is one of the most important factors for increasing the food production in the 21st century. The main requirement for breeders and geneticists to face stressors like water deficit is a wide gene pool with stress tolerance genes [8]

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