Crop Science Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in Crop Sci 33:549-555 (1993)
© 1993 Crop Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Influence of Pollination Pattern on Intrapanicle Caryopsis Weight in Sorghum

Ronnie W. Heiniger* and Richard L. Vanderlip

Kansas State Univ., Manhattan, KS, 66506

Kenneth D. Kofoid

1232 240th Ave., Fort Hays Exp. Stn., Hays, KS 67601-9228

* Corresponding author.

Recent studies have shown that changes in grain-fill rates within the sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] panicle cause caryopsis weights to decrease from the apex to the base. Pollination pattern in the sorghum panicle is also basipetal. The objectives of this study were to determine if pollination pattern influences intrapanicle caryopsis weights and to determine which components of grain fill are affected by pollination pattern. Field studies were done in 1990 at Manhattan, KS, on a Reading silt loam [fine-silty, mixed, mesic Typic Argiudoll (0–1% slope)] and Hays, KS, on a Barney silt loam [fine, montmorillonitic, mesic Typic Argiustoll (0–1% slope)]. At Manhattan, eight pollination-pattern treatments were applied to DeKalb DK 46 and its male-sterile parent, 97A. At Hays, a male-sterile hybrid, KS56A x KS47B, received four of the eight treatments. Panicles were divided into four equal sections; apex, upper middle, lower middle, and base. Different pollination patterns were applied to the sterilized panicles by exposing the appropriate sections to pollen. Differences in caryopsis weights and weight components were determined using analysis of variance and linear regression analyses. In all cases, intrapanicle caryopsis weights followed the pollination pattern applied. The panicle sections pollinated first had caryopses that were from 1.0 to 2.5 mg heavier than those found in the sections pollinated later. Pollination pattern influenced caryopsis weight by influencing grain-fill rates within the panicle; the length of the grain-fill period did not change. Apparently, caryopses that were pollinated first were better competitors for assimilates than those pollinated later.


Contribution no. 92-521-J from the Kansas Agric. Exp. Stn., Manhattan, KS 66506. Research partially funded by USAID Grant no. DAN 1254-G-00-0021-00 through INTSORMIL, the International Sorghum and Millet CRSP.

Received for publication May 27, 1992.


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B. L. Gambin and L. Borras
Sorghum Kernel Weight: Growth Patterns from Different Positions within the Panicle
Crop Sci., January 31, 2005; 45(2): 553 - 561.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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