Crop Science Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in Crop Sci 21:253-255 (1981)
© 1981 Crop Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Seminal Root Morphology and Water Use of Wheat II. Genetic Variation1

R. A. Richards and J. B. Passioura2

The resistance to the longitudinal flow of water through the seminal roots of a wheat (Triticum spp.) plant depends largely on the number of seminal axes and on the diameters of their main xylem vessels. With a view to increasing this resistance by breeding, the nature and extent of genetic variation in these root characters were investigated in over 1,000 accessions of both modern and primitive wheats with different ploidy levels and in populations derived from them. The diameter of the xylem vessel proved to be the more tractable character. This was because (1) no accession, or line derived from different F2 populations, had substantially fewer seminal axes than average, whereas some land-race wheats with acceptably narrow vessels were found, and (2) parent-offspring regressions established that the heritability of vessel diameter was considerably higher than that of the number of axes. Vessel diameter can be manipulated genetically as was shown by the significant responses to selection in different populations.

Key Words: Triticum spp. • Drought resistance • Xylem vessel


1 Contribution from CSIRO Division of Plant Industry. Research supported by the Australian Wheat Industry Res. Coun.

2 Research Scientists, Division of Plant Industry, CSIRO, P. O. Box 1600, Canberra City, A.C.T. 2601, Australia.

Received for publication November 19, 1979.


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Y. Hebert, E. Guingo, and O. Loudet
The Response of Root/Shoot Partitioning and Root Morphology to Light Reduction in Maize Genotypes
Crop Sci., March 1, 2001; 41(2): 363 - 371.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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