Selection for cold tolerance in Phaseolus vulgaris— yields of selected lines grown in warm and cool environments |
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Authors: | R C HARDWICK D J ANDREWS |
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Institution: | National Vegetable Research Station, Wellesbourne, Warwick CV35 9EF |
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Abstract: | Forty-eight F4 families of a cross between two cultivars of Phaseolus vulgaris were grown in ‘warm’ and ‘cool’ environments in the field. The F2 and F3 generations had been assessed for cold tolerance using the test described by Hardwick & Andrews (1980). The mean seed yields of the F4's were 333 and 167 g m-2 in the ‘warm’ environment (blackened soil surface, clear polyethylene mulch, windbreaks) and ‘cool’ environment (whitened soil surface, no mulch or windbreaks) respectively. The ratio of yields in the two environments was larger in families selected for cold sensitivity than in those selected for cold tolerance (values of ratio 2.28 to 1 and 1.76 to 1 respectively). The ‘warm’ treatment decreased the number of days between sowing and emergence from 15.6 to 8.6, increased the estimated weight per seedling axis at emergence from 544 to 904 mg/plant, and increased the weight/plant at flowering from 3.75 to 4.7 g. Plants from the ‘warm’ treatment had bigger leaf weights, smaller stem weights, more branches and bigger specific leaf areas than plants of the same weight from the ‘cool’ treatment. Differences in yield were due mainly to differences in the number of seeds produced/plant. Eleven F, families were grown in a simple yield trial the following year. The season was cooler and yields were reduced. The reduction in yield was greater in the cold sensitive than in the cold tolerant families. |
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