Abstract

In order to study the effect of duration of the vegetative period (sowing to floral initiation) on potential yield, sister spring wheat semi-dwarf cultivars, Yecora and Cajeme, the latter having an extra vernalization sensitive allele (Vrn-A1v) and a photoperiod sensitive one (Ppd-D1b), were grown at 4–5 sowing dates over 5 years under irrigation and high fertility in northwest Mexico (latitude 27°N). In the earliest sowings (late Oct-early Nov) Cajeme had a 20day longer vegetative period; this delay decreased steadily to 8days in the latest sowings (mid-late January); anthesis date for Cajeme was, respectively, 17 and 6days later. Relationships to minimum temperature levels in the vegetative phase strongly suggest that this sowing date by cultivar interaction arises largely because of the difference in vernalization alleles in an environment where there is limited vernalizing cold. Cajeme produced a greater maximum number of shoots, more spikelet nodes per spike, greater green area index, and greater above ground dry matter at anthesis and at physiological maturity. However Cajeme yielded no more than Yecora, even when yield was plotted against anthesis date, tending to have fewer grains/m2. A similar conclusion was reached when grains/m2 were related to preanthesis photothermal quotient, and grain weight to grain filling mean temperature: both cultivars responded similarly although Cajeme had slightly fewer grains/m2 and heavier kernels, thus weather around flowering dominated determination of these yield components. Some other yield components were also slightly, but significantly, affected by cultivar in a manner independent of flowering date and weather. Thus Cajeme had a significantly higher spike dry matter at anthesis and a significantly lower fruiting efficiency of Cajeme (73.8 versus 84.2 grains/g spike dry matter). It is suggested that the latter was a consequence of the longer vegetative period leading to greater tillering, poorer tiller survival and a more competitive preanthesis canopy, causing poorer floret survival in grain-bearing spikes. The excessive tillering may have been exaggerated by supplying all nitrogen fertilizer at sowing.

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