Abstract

ABSTRACTRecent research has addressed the potential for gene flow in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). However, there is scant information on the fate of introgressed genes in the subsequent crop rotation. The objective of this study was to quantify spring wheat volunteers potentially arising from gene flow. A total of 152 wheat fields that had been used to measure gene flow at distances of up to 10 km were surveyed for blue aleurone volunteers for 3 yr postharvest. No blue aleurone seed was detected in samples from the 152 fields surveyed. A single blue aleurone volunteer plant was detected in a pollen donor field subsequently sown to wheat in the third year postharvest. The absence of blue aleurone wheat volunteers in the postharvest crop rotation was not unexpected as only four of the original 152 fields had shown evidence of gene flow. Under the environmental and crop management practices encountered in this study, the risk of a gene flow‐based adventitious event in spring wheat being detected at significant levels in subsequent crops appears low.

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