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Published in Crop Sci 23:1093-1097 (1983)
© 1983 Crop Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Role of Panicle Exsertion in Water Stress Induced Sterility1

J. C. O'Toole and O. S. Namuco2

Although the sensitivity of crop species to water stress during reproductive growth stages is well documented, the causes of sterility are not understood. The role of decreased panicle exsertion as a causal factor of spikelet sterility in water stressed rice (Oryza sativa L.) was investigated. Rice cultivar IR36 was grown on a deep silty loam soil under full sprinkler irrigation for 77 days. A line source sprinkler system was then utilized during panicle exsertion and flowering to impose six continuously decreasing irrigation treatments. After the 15-day treatment period, full sprinkler irrigation was resumed until maturity. Soil moisture extraction and plant water potential were monitored as soil and plant water stress progressed. Panicle exsertion rate was measured on tagged panicles which were later used to assess percent final panicle exsertion and percent sterility. The six irrigation treatments varied in grain yield from 5.0 t ha–1 to about 1 t ha–1 with corresponding increases in spikelet sterility of 16.6 and 74.2%. Panicle exsertion rate decreased linearly with decreasing mean daily leaf water potential. The degree of final panicle exsertion from the flagleaf sheath and percent spikelet sterility both decreased linearly with panicle exsertion rate. All spikelets left unexserted from the flagleaf sheath were sterile. Panicle exsertion rate was slightly confounded by tiller age in that late tillers in the well irrigated treatment had a slower exsertion rate and higher percent sterility than earlier tillers. The early tillers which exserted at rates of 4.5 to 5.5 cm day–1 under well watered conditions decreased to about 3.0 cm day–1 in the stressed plot and accounted for 25 to 30% spikelet sterility in the severely stressed treatment.

Key Words: Oryza sativa L. • Leaf water potential • Spikelet sterility • Reproductive stage water stress • Growth rate • Evapotranspiration


1 Contribution from the Agronomy Dep., The Int. Rice Res. Inst., P.O. Box 933, Manila, Philippines.

2 Agronomist and research assistant, The Int. Rice Res. Inst.

Received for publication November 15, 1982.


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J. C. Lanceras, G. Pantuwan, B. Jongdee, and T. Toojinda
Quantitative Trait Loci Associated with Drought Tolerance at Reproductive Stage in Rice
Plant Physiology, May 1, 2004; 135(1): 384 - 399.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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