Tl. Botwright et al., Influence of variety, seed position and seed source on screening for coleoptile length in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), EUPHYTICA, 119(3), 2001, pp. 349-356
The short coleoptiles of Rht-B1b and Rht-D1b semidwarf wheats can contribut
e to poor seedling establishment when sowing seed at depth or into stubble.
Alternative dwarfing genes are available to reduce plant height but which
allow selection for increased coleoptile length. Response to selection for
genes conferring greater coleoptile length requires that phenotypic variati
on for coleoptile length is largely attributable to genotypic differences a
nd not to sampling variation that would otherwise reduce heritability. The
influence of sampling on coleoptile length was investigated for a range of
ear-position and environmental factors commonly encountered when screening
breeding populations for coleoptile length. Changes in floret position with
in the spikelet produced significant (p < 0.01) changes in coleoptile lengt
h but these were attributable to differences in kernel size, not floret pos
ition per se. Seed source effects were small except for weather-damaged see
d where reductions in falling numbers were associated with small yet signif
icant (p < 0.05) reductions in coleoptile length. Differences in coleoptile
length among varieties were substantially larger than for effects associat
ed with either grain size or seed production source. Standard height ( rht)
and gibberellic acid (GA)-sensitive Rht8/9 semidwarf wheat varieties produ
ced coleoptiles that were between 25 to 40% longer than GA-insensitive Rht-
B1b and Rht-D1b semidwarf varieties. Furthermore, increasing mean soil temp
erature from 11 to 19 degreesC reduced coleoptile length by 20% in rht and
Rht8/9 wheats and by as much as 50% in Rht-B1b and Rht-D1b semidwarfs. Our
results indicate that selection for increased coleoptile length can be made
readily in a wheat-breeding program which includes GA-sensitive parents.