Heterosis for Interactions between Insect Herbivores and 3-Line Hybrid Rice under Low and High Soil Nitrogen Conditions

Author:

Horgan Finbarr G.123ORCID,Bernal Carmencita C.4,Ramal Angelee Fame5,Almazan Maria Liberty P.4,Mundaca Enrique A.2ORCID,Crisol-Martínez Eduardo167

Affiliation:

1. EcoLaVerna Integral Restoration Ecology, Bridestown, Kildinan, Co., T56 P499 Cork, Ireland

2. School of Agronomy, Faculty of Agrarian and Forestry Sciences, Catholic University of Maule, Casilla 7-D, Curicó 3349001, Chile

3. Centre for Pesticide Suicide Prevention, University/British Heart Foundation Centre for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH16 4TJ, UK

4. International Rice Research Institute, Makati 1226, Philippines

5. School of Environmental Science and Management, University of the Philippines, Los Baños 4030, Philippines

6. Association of Fruit and Vegetable Growers of Almeria (COEXPHAL), Carretera de Ronda 11, 04004 Almeria, Spain

7. Department of Zoology, Ecology and Plant Science, University College Cork, Butler Building, Distillery Fields, North Mall, T23 N73K Cork, Ireland

Abstract

Hybrid rice results from crossing a male-sterile line (the A line) with a pollen doner (the restorer or R line). In 3-line hybrid breeding systems, a fertile B line is also required to maintain A line populations. Heterosis is defined as a condition of traits whereby the hybrid exceeds the average of the parental lines. Heterobeltiosis is where the hybrid exceeds both parents. Hybrid rice may display heterosis/heterobeltiosis for growth, yield and resistance to herbivores, among other traits. In a greenhouse experiment, we assessed the frequency of heterosis for resistance to the brown planthopper (Nilaparvata lugans (BPH)), whitebacked planthopper (Sogatella furcifera (WBPH)) and yellow stemborer (Scirpophaga incertulas (YSB)) in eight hybrids under varying soil nitrogen conditions. We also assessed plant biomass losses due to herbivore feeding as an approximation of tolerance (the plant’s capacity to compensate for damage). Nitrogen reduced resistance to all three herbivores but was also associated with tolerance to WBPH and YSB based on improved plant survival, growth and/or yields. Plant biomass losses per unit weight of WBPH also declined under high nitrogen conditions for a number of hybrids, and there were several cases of overcompensation in rice for attacks by this herbivore. There was one case of nitrogen-related tolerance to BPH (increased grain yield) for a hybrid line with relatively high resistance, likely due to quantitative traits. Heterosis and heterobeltiosis were not essential to produce relatively high herbivore resistance or tolerance across hybrids.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Global Rice Science Partnership

government of Spain

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference65 articles.

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