Abstract

Recombinational and mutational analyses were performed in an attempt to elucidate the nature of the genic differences and the ancestral relationship between the indica and japonica subspecies of Oryza sativa L. by taking representative varieties from each group. The absence of cytological aberrations at meiosis in indica×japonica hybrids suggest that genetic differences are predominantly genic rather than chromosomal. The pattern of variation induced in the key characters, and the frequency and spectra of mutations obtained in each group, failed to support the hypothesis that indica has given rise to japonica, and suggested that the two subspecies have originated from a common ancestor.

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