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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Stuttgart, Arkansas » Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #260664

Title: Comparison and heritability of major rice end-use quality traits among diverse accessions grown in both tropical and temperate USA environments and genetic marker implications

Author
item Fjellstrom, Robert
item Chen, Ming Hsuan
item MCKENZIE, KENT - California Cooperative Rice Research Foundation
item BERGMAN, CHRISTINE - University Of Nevada

Submitted to: American Society of Agronomy Meetings
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 11/2/2010
Publication Date: 11/2/2010
Citation: Fjellstrom, R.G., Chen, M., Mckenzie, K., Bergman, C. 2010. Comparison and heritability of major rice end-use quality traits among diverse accessions grown in both tropical and temperate USA environments and genetic marker implications. American Society of Agronomy Meetings. Paper 61381.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Growing environment has been well-documented as playing a large role in effecting the end-use quality traits of rice. Apparent amylose content (AAC) and gelatinization temperature (GT) are considered to be the two most important end-use quality characteristics in rice, defining the major classes that rice is sold within domestic and international markets. We analyzed the levels of these two quality characteristics among a set of genetically diverse accessions of rice grown in two vastly different US rice production environments. Ninety diverse accessions of rice were grown for two seasons in both Texas and California, and AAC and alkali spreading values (an indirect measurement of GT) were measured on mature grain. Analysis of variance results indicated that these two end-use quality measurements had very high heritability levels, despite the large differences in growing environments. DNA markers located at the Waxy and Alk genes explained a large majority of the variation in these traits, indicating their usefulness to predict AAC and GT in a broad expanse of germplasm and production environments.