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Monogenic male-sterility has not been utilized so far in the improvement of rice (Oryza saliva L.) because it is not available to breeders in an agronomically useful genetic background. The objective of this study was to induce male-sterility in a widely grown rice cultivar IR36.
One hundred grams each of dried seeds of the rice cultivar IR36 were treated with 0.2, 0.4, 0.8, 1.2, and 1.6% concentrations of ethyleneimine for 1 or 3 hours to obtain monogenic male-sterile mutants. Seed treatments with higher concentrations and longer durations had greater reductions in the percent seed germination than treatments with lower concentrations and shorter durations. Treatments for 1 hour with 0.4% and for 3 hours with 0.2% concentrations reduced seed germination to 69 and 30%, respectively, and were considered more satisfactory than other treatments. In four M2 progenies, male-sterile plants with normal meiosis were crossed with control IR36 and segregation in F2 indicated that one recessive gene controlled inheritance for male-sterility in each of these lines. The male-sterile plants showed high seed set from outcrossing. Possible use of recessive genes for male-sterility in rice improvement was discussed.
Key Words: Oryza sativa L. Male-sterility Chemical mutation
2 Post doctoral fellow, (Present address: Dep. of Agronomy, Colorado State Univ. Fort Collins, CO 80523) and former plant breeder, International Rice Research Institute, Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines.
Received for publication December 26, 1979.
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