Root rot resistance in common beans sought in plant breeding program
Authors
Francis L. SmithByron R. Houston
Authors Affiliations
Francis L. Smith is Professor of Agronomy, University of California, Davis; Byron R. Houston is Professor of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis.Publication Information
Hilgardia 14(9):8-8. DOI:10.3733/ca.v014n09p8a. September 1960.
PDF of full article, Cite this article
Abstract
More than 1,200 introductions and commercial bean varieties were tested by inoculation with cultures of the two most prevalent organisms causing root rot in California. Only seven showed some tolerance to the Fusarium fungus, and none to the Rhizoctonia. These seven were crossed with ten commercial bean varieties in most of the 70 possible combinations. Each plant was, graded on severity score of 0-4, and the average scores were used for evaluation. None of the first-generation plants showed resistance. Second-generation plants were tested from 60 of the 70 combinations. These tests indicated that hybrids from three of the resistant lines gave very few plants with low disease scores. Second-generation plants of hybrids from the other four accessions had 16%-19% resistant plants, or a ratio of 13 susceptible to three resistant. These results could be explained by assuming that resistance is due to two independent genes, one dominant and the other recessive. To test this hypothesis, four third-generation combinations were tested. To confirm the assumption, only 1/16 of the third-generation progenies would have disease scores as low as the resistant parent, and 2/16 would segregate three resistant to one susceptible and would have relatively low average scores.
Also in this issue:
Industry controls in plum marketing have affected fruit qualityRelationships of agricultural burning and air pollution studied in preliminary experiments
Automation in cleaning food processing plant equipment
Imported Indian Parasite of Pea Aphid established in California
Effectiveness of integrated control programs against pests on agricultural crops
Rootstock breeding for new grape varieties
Investigations show azalea root rot can be controlled by soil treatment
Study of wines by controlled fermentations in specially designed equipment
Study on mosquito flight
Shade area requirements for beef feed lots in the Imperial Valley
Pelleted hay mixture enables dairy cattle to give more milk with less butterfat
Perplexing problem of PEACH TREE REPLANTS
The manufacturing of fats in plants
Disease resistance in peppers
Effects of sodium in water on infiltration rates
Proper depths for drainage tile
Water interaction with plant carbohydrates
Microscopic mites on bees
Sunlight intensity tests on ornamentals
Modified atmospheres: For vegetables after harvest
Size relations of canning peaches
Study on control of fruit ripening
Reduction of impurities in distillation of brandy
Improved strain of honeybees
The effect of certain added materials on bordeaux mixture in the control of peach blight and leaf curl
Phytophthora Cinnamomi and wet soil in relation to the dying-back of avocado trees
Pythiaceous fungi on citrus