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Inheritance of resistance to the bean-pod weevil (Apion godmani Wagner) in common beans from Mexico
Authors:R Garza  C Cardona  S P Singh
Institution:(1) Programa de Entomología, CEVAMEX, INIFAP, Apartado, Postal No. 10, 56230 Chapingo, Estado de Mexico, Mexico;(2) Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), A. A. 6713, Cali, Colombia
Abstract:The bean-pod weevil (BPW), Apion godmani Wagner, often causes heavy losses in crops of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.). Farmers need resistant bean cultivars to minimize losses, cut production costs, stabilize seed yield, and reduce pesticide use and consequent health hazards. To design effective breeding methods, breeders need new and better sources of resistance and increased knowledge of their modes of inheritance. We therefore: (1) compared sources of resistance to BPW, (2) studied the inheritance of resistance, and (3) determined whether the sources possess similar or different genes for BPW resistance. The following sources of resistance, originating from the Mexican highlands, were evaluated for 3 years at INIFAP-Santa Lucía de Prias, Texcoco, Mexico: lsquoAmarillo 153rsquo, lsquoAmarillo 169rsquo, lsquoHidalgo 58rsquo, lsquoJ 117rsquo, lsquoPinto Texcocorsquo, lsquoPinto 168rsquo, and lsquoPuebla 36rsquo. All except lsquoPuebla 36rsquo were crossed with the susceptible cultivar lsquoJamaparsquo. lsquoAmarillo 153rsquo and lsquoPuebla 36rsquo were crossed with another susceptible cultivar, lsquoBayo Mexrsquo. The parents, F1 hybrids, and F2 populations were evaluated for BPW damage in 1992. Backcrosses of the F1 of Jamapa/Pinto 168 to the respective susceptible and resistant parents were also evaluated in 1992. All seven resistant accessions were crossed in all possible combinations, excluding reciprocals. The resulting 21 F1 hybrids and 21 F2 populations were evaluated for BPW damage in 1994. lsquoJ 117rsquo had the highest level of resistance to BPW. lsquoPinto Texcocorsquo and lsquoPuebla 36rsquo had the highest mean damage score of all seven sources of resistance. The F1 hybrids between susceptible parents and resistant sources were generally intermediate. Two genes segregating independently controlled the BPW resistance in each accession. One gene, Agm, has no effect when present alone, whereas the other gene, Agr, alone conferred intermediate resistance. When both genes were present, resistance to BPW was higher. Based on mean BPW damage scores, all 21 F1 hybrids and their F2 populations, derived from crosses among seven resistant accessions, were resistant. However, data from individual plant damage scores in F2 populations of Amarillo 169/Pinto 168 and Pinto Texcoco/Pinto 168 suggested that at least one gene in each of the three accessions was non-allelic. Data also indicated that lsquoAmarillo 169rsquo had a dominant gene that conferred high levels of BPW resistance, irrespective of the alleles at the other locus; and that lsquoPinto Texcocorsquo and lsquoPinto 168rsquo possessed two different genes for intermediate resistance.
Keywords:Apion godmani  Bean-pod weevil  Breeding for resistance  Common bean  Inheritance  Phaseolus vulgaris
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