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ARS Home » Plains Area » Fargo, North Dakota » Edward T. Schafer Agricultural Research Center » Sunflower and Plant Biology Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #235587

Title: Pyramiding Sclerotinia head rot and stalk rot resistances into elite sunflower breeding lines with the aid of DNA markers

Author
item Hulke, Brent
item GULYA JR, THOMAS
item HU, JINGUO

Submitted to: Meeting Abstract
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 12/30/2008
Publication Date: 1/19/2009
Citation: Hulke, B.S., Gulya, T.J., Hu, J. 2009. Pyramiding Sclerotinia Head Rot and Stalk Rot Resistances into Elite Sunflower Breeding Lines with the Aid of DNA Markers [abstract]. 2009 Sclerotinia Initiative Annual Meeting, January 21-23, 2009, Bloomington, MN. p. 22.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Work was conducted in 2008 to determine the stalk rot resistance of RILs from the RHA 280 x RHA 801 population, as well as to begin introgression of previously identified QTL for head rot resistance into elite sunflower germplasm lines. The stalk rot RILs and their testcrosses with cms HA 89 were tested in two environments in 2008. Only one environment produced good differentiation of lines and testcrosses, the other was uninformative. This data, taken together with previous data from 2006 and the greenhouse, is not enough to release lines from this population. Analysis with molecular markers in this population has found six putative QTL for stalk rot resistance, although the stalk rot resistance data going into the model had a large error variance. The work to begin introgression of the head rot QTL into elite germplasm began this year with the final purification of a RIL line with a large number of the QTL alleles of interest, and the formation of F1 populations in both confection and oilseed backgrounds. As of December, work was underway to genotype the F1 plants and parent lines to confirm genomic constitution at the loci of interest, as well as to produce BC1F1 seed to continue population development. An additional backcross will be attempted in 2009, with line development and field testing to follow.