Abstract

Mungbean [Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek] and blackgram [Vigna mungo (L.) Hepper] are important crops for smallholder farmers in tropical and subtropical regions. Production of both crops is affected by unexpected and increasingly frequent extreme precipitation events, which result in transient soil waterlogging. This study aimed to compare the waterlogging tolerance of mungbean and blackgram genotypes under the varying duration of waterlogging stress at germination and seedling stages. We evaluated the responses to different durations of transient waterlogging in a sandy clay loam under temperature-controlled glasshouse conditions. Waterlogging durations were 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 days during germination and 0, 2, 4, 8, and 16 days during the seedling stage. We used two mungbean genotypes (green testa), Celera II-AU (small-seeded), and Jade-AU (large-seeded), contrasting in seed size and hypocotyl pigmentation, and a blackgram genotype (black testa), Onyx-AU. Waterlogging reduced soil redox potential, delayed or even prevented germination, decreased seedling establishment, and affected shoot and root development. In the seedlings waterlogged (WL) at 15 days after sowing (DAS), adventitious root formation and crown nodulation varied between the genotypes, and 16 days of waterlogging substantially reduced growth but did not result in plant death. Plants in soil with waterlogging for 8–16 days followed by drainage and sampling at 39 DAS had reduced shoot and root dry mass by 60–65% in mungbean and 40% in blackgram compared with continuously drained controls, due at least in part to fewer lateral roots. Soil plant analysis development (SPAD) chlorophyll content was also reduced. Onyx-AU, a blackgram genotype, was more tolerant to transient waterlogging than Jade-AU and Celera II-AU in both growth stages. Of the two mungbean genotypes, Celera II-AU had a greater seedling establishment than Jade-AU post waterlogging imposed at sowing. In contrast, Jade-AU had more plant biomass and greater recovery growth than Celera II-AU after waterlogging and recovery during the seedling stage. Both species were delayed in emergence in response to the shorter periods of transient waterlogging at germination, and with the longer waterlogging germination and emergence failed, whereas at the seedling stage both showed adaptation by the formation of adventitious roots.

Highlights

  • Mungbean [Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek] and blackgram [Vigna mungo (L.) Hepper] are short-seasontropical grain legumes and are important due to their valuable seed nutritional composition for the human diet and income for growers (Somta and Srinives, 2007)

  • In the drained control soil (39 days after sowing (DAS)), the large-seeded mungbean Jade-AU had 22% more shoot dry mass than the smallseeded mungbean Celera II-AU and 40% more than blackgram Onyx-AU

  • At the end of the experiment, plants exposed to 16 days of waterlogging and allowed 8 days recovery had 60% less total dry mass in mungbean and 40% less in blackgram than those of drained control plants

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Summary

Introduction

Mungbean [Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek] and blackgram [Vigna mungo (L.) Hepper] are short-season (sub)tropical grain legumes and are important due to their valuable seed nutritional composition for the human diet and income for growers (Somta and Srinives, 2007). Global blackgram production reached 3.2 million tons in 2018, with India producing 1.9 million tons on 3.5 million ha and Myanmar generating 1.24 million tons on 9.78 million ha (Soe et al, 2020). Both crops are predominantly grown in the tropics in rainfed farming systems (Lawn and Ahn, 1985), where yield variation is high due to biotic and abiotic stresses

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