Genetics of phenological development and implications for seed yield in lentil

Author:

Lake Lachlan123ORCID,Hayes Julie E2,Ortega Martinez Raul4,Weller Jim L4ORCID,Javid Muhammad5,Butler Jacob B4ORCID,James Laura E4,Gimenez Raul146,Dreccer M Fernanda7,French Robert5,Sadras Victor O123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. South Australian Research and Development Institute , Australia

2. School of Agriculture, Food and Wine, The University of Adelaide , Australia

3. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University , Australia

4. School of Natural Sciences, University of Tasmania , Sandy Bay Campus, Hobart, Tasmania , Australia

5. Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development , Merredin, WA , Australia

6. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) , Argentina

7. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation , Queensland , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Understanding phenology, its genetics and agronomic consequences, is critical for crop adaptation. Here we aim to (i) characterize lentil response to photoperiod with a focus on five loci: the lentil ELF3 orthologue Sn, two loci linked to clusters of lentil FT orthologues, and two loci without candidates in chromosomes 2 and 5 (Experiment 1: 36 lines, short and long days in a phytotron), and (ii) establish the phenology–yield relationship (Experiment 2: 25 lines, 11 field environments). A vintage perspective, where we quantify time trends in phenotype over three decades of breeding, links both experiments. Yield increased linearly from older to newer varieties at 29 kg ha–1 year–1 or 1.5% year–1, correlated negatively with flowering time in both winter- and summer-rainfall regimes, and decoupled from biomass in favourable environments. Time to flowering shortened from older to newer varieties at –0.56% year–1 in the field, and –0.42% year–1 (short days) and –0.99% year–1 (long days) in the phytotron. Early-flowering lines of diverse origin carried multiple early alleles for the five loci, indicating that at least some of these loci affect phenology additively. Current germplasm primarily features the early-flowering haplotype for an FTb cluster region, hence the potential to increase phenological diversity with yield implications.

Funder

Grains Research and Development Corporation of Australia

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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