Author:
Scott B. J.,Fisher J. A.,Cullis B. R.
Abstract
Acidic soils constrain wheat yield in some parts of central and southern New
South Wales. This paper describes research designed to evaluate the usefulness
of aluminium (Al) tolerance, manganese (Mn) tolerance and the interaction of
lime use and Al tolerance in improving wheat yields.
Closely related pairs of wheat lines with tolerance and sensitivity of Al and
Mn were bred. Carazinho (a Brazilian wheat cultivar) was used as a source of
Al tolerance in a backcrossing, recurrent selection program to introduce
tolerance into an Egret background (a locally adapted Australian cultivar).
Aluminium tolerance was determined using the haematoxylin root tip test and Mn
tolerance was determined using a subirrigated gravel bed system. Eight pairs
divergent in tolerance of Al were evaluated for their yield on 3 acidic soil
types in 5 field experiments. Grain yield increased in Egret-derived lines
when Al tolerance from Carazinho was introduced. Yield from the Al-sensitive
genotypes (averaged over the 8 pairs) compared with the Al-tolerant genotypes
was 0.43 to 0.98 t/ha and 0.88 to 1.38 t/ha respectively on an acid
earthy sand in central western New South Wales (Binnaway) in 2 seasons, and
1.08 to 1.96 t/ha and 1.29 to 1.88 t/ha on an acid podsolic soil in
southern New South Wales (Borambola).
On a moderately acidic red earth site (pH Ca 4.8) at
Wagga Wagga, no such advantage accrued to the Al-tolerant group with the
average yield for the sensitive and tolerant pairs being 5.00 and 4.78
t/ha, respectively. Manganese tolerance was assessed in only 1 of these
experiments (Borambola) using 6 pairs of lines tolerant of Al but with
contrasting Mn tolerance. No advantage of Mn tolerance was apparent at this
site.
At Binnaway the tolerant and sensitive lines responded to lime application
with the tolerant lines yielding on average about 0.42 t/ha of grain more
than the sensitive lines even when 5 t/ha of lime was applied. At
Borambola the tolerant lines yielded 0.59 t/ha of grain more than the
sensitive lines when no lime was applied. With lime application this
difference in performance disappeared and Al-tolerant and sensitive lines
yielded equally. At the Wagga Wagga site, the addition of lime did not affect
the yield of the sensitive lines, while the tolerant lines showed a yield
depression of 0.32 t/ha of grain with lime application.
Three different relationships between lime application and Al tolerance were
observed. While 2 relationships fit with our previous understanding, grain
yield depression resulting from the combined use of Al tolerance and lime at
our least acidic site remains poorly understood.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
39 articles.
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