Abstract
The cultivar URS Brava, obtained from a simple cross between the line 'UFRGS 995078-2' and the cultivar 'URS 21', shows high grain yield and stability, high grain quality, desirable agronomical traits and partial resistance to crown rust, caused by the fungus Puccinia coronata f. sp. avenae.
Avena sativa L.; oat breeding; seed production
INTRODUCTION
Cultivated oat (Avena sativa L.) is an important crop species that is grown as a source of food and feed worldwide. Oat is a self-pollinated and allohexaploid (2n=6x=42) species that originated in the Mediterranean and has been adapted to a wide range of environments. In subtropical environments where two crops can be grown in a single year, such as southern Brazil, oat plays an important role in the crop management system. During the winter-spring seasons, oat can be cultivated in rotation with wheat or barley, which may reduce damages caused by diseases that survive on crop residues. Furthermore, oat allows for the establishment and maintenance of the no-tillage system and represents an excellent option for grain production in succession with soybean (Locatelli et al. 2007Locatelli AB, Federizzi LC, Milach SCK and McElroy AR (2007) Flowering time in oat: genotype characterization for photoperiod and vernalization response. Field Crops Research 106: 242-247.).
According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), global oat production in 2013 was approximately 23.88 million tons per year harvested over an area of 9.78 million hectares (FAOSTAT 2015FAOSTAT - Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database (2015) Available at <Available at http://faostat3.fao.org/download/Q/QC/E >. Accessed in Feb 2015.
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). However, the global production of oat has decreased in recent decades, including in the largest oat-producing countries, which include Russia, Canada, Australia and Poland. This decreasing trend can be explained by the reduced production of oat grains for feed, especially for horses, and by the substitution of oat with more cost-effective crops, such as soybean and maize, in the northern hemisphere where oat is cultivated in the spring-summer. However, an increasing and sustainable trend has been observed in the production, yield and cultivated area of oat in Brazil over recent decades. The data from the historical series made available by the National Food Supply Agency (CONAB 2015CONAB - Companhia Nacional de Abastecimento (2015) Série histórica de área, produtividade e produção de trigo. Available at < Available at http://www.conab.gov.br >. Accessed in Feb 2015.
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) show this increase, in which oat production went from 37.4 thousand tons collected in 1976 to more than 300 thousand tons estimated for the harvest of 2014, although the Brazilian production has already reached 500 thousand tons in 2005.
The continuous development of new oat cultivars is essential to guarantee the survival and progress of this crop in Brazil. Therefore, the Oat Breeding Program of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul - UFRGS) aims to develop cultivars with wide adaptability, high grain yield, high milling yield, excellent agronomical traits such as the vegetative cycle (Nava et al. 2012Nava IC, Wight CP, Pacheco MT, Federizzi LC and Tinker NA (2012) Tagging and mapping candidate loci for vernalization and flower initiation in hexaploid oat. Molecular Breeding 30: 1295-1312.), plant height, lodging tolerance, frost tolerance, and toxic aluminum tolerance (Nava et al. 2006Nava IC, Delatorre CA, Duarte ITL, Pacheco MT and Federizzi LC (2006) Inheritance of aluminium tolerance and its effects on grain yield and grain quality in oats (Avena sativa L.). Euphytica 148: 353-358.), as well as with an adequate level of genetic resistance to the main crop diseases (Graichen et al. 2011Graichen FAS, Martinelli JA, Wesp CL, Federizzi LC and Chaves MS (2011) Epidemiological and histological components of crown resistance in oat genotypes. European Journal of Plant Pathology 131: 497-510., Zambonato et al. 2012Zambonato F, Federizzi LC, Pacheco MT, Arruda MP and Martinelli JA (2012) Phenotypic and genetic characterization of partial resistance to crown rust in Avena sativa L. Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology12: 261-268.).
BREEDING METHOD
The oat cultivar URS Brava was derived from a simple cross between the line UFRGS 995078-2 and the cultivar URS 21 cultivar. The genealogy of the line UFRGS 995078-2 is 'UFRGS 10 / PAUL', and the genealogy of the cultivar URS 21 is 'UFRGS 10 / CTC 84B993'. URS Brava and both of the parental genotypes were developed by the Oat Breeding Program of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS). The artificial hybridizations of the parental genotypes UFRGS 995078-2 and URS 21 were performed in 2001 at the Agronomy Experimental Station of the UFRGS, which is located in Eldorado do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil. The line UFRGS 995078-2 was used as the female parent and the cultivar URS 21 was used as the male parent according to the open flower method described by Bertagnolli and Federizzi (1994Bertagnolli PF and Federizzi LC (1994) Cruzamentos artificiais em aveia. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira 29: 601-606.). Only one seed from the first filial generation (F1) was obtained from this cross, and it was sown in the field in July 2002 under identification number 22a, which corresponded to the control number of the cross performed during the previous year. All of the F1 plant panicles were collected and bulk-threshed to yield seeds for the second filial generation (F2).
The segregating population obtained from the cross between UFRGS 995078-2 x URS 21 was advanced by the modified genealogical method during all of the generations of self-pollination and selection (from F2 to F6) at the Agronomy Experimental Station of the UFRGS. The main modifications of the method consisted of advancing the F2 population in a semi-dense planting system and harvesting one panicle from each selected plant. In the 2003 growing season (June to November), the F2 seeds were sown in six double rows (2.0 m long) in the field, with a spacing of 0.20 m between single rows and 0.40 m between double rows. During sowing, approximately 100 seeds were sown in each double row, representing a population of approximately 600 plants. The F2 population was identified using the combination of numbers 032029, in which '03' represents the year 2003, '2' represents the F2generation and '029' represents the number of the evaluated population. From the F2 generation, 22 panicles were selected in the field, threshed individually and evaluated in the laboratory for traits related to grain quality, such as filling, size, shape, uniformity and health. A total of 20 panicles were selected in the laboratory, yielding 20 F2:3families.
The F2:3 families were sown in 2004 under the identification numbers 043023-1 to 043023-20. From the family 043023-2, four panicles were selected in the field, and two panicles were selected in the laboratory to yield the F3:4 generation. The two F3:4 families were sown in 2005 and identified as 054053-1 and 054053-2. From the 054053-2 family, 10 individual panicles were selected in the field, and five panicles were selected in the laboratory to yield the F4:5 generation. The F4:5lines were sown in 2006 and identified as 065037-1 to 065037-5. From the 065037-4 family, seven individual panicles were selected in the field, and only three panicles were selected in the laboratory to yield the F5:6generation.
At the F4:5 generation, abundant chlorosis and necrosis on the leaf laminae were observed around small pustules of crown rust on the 27 lines available for the population UFRGS 995078-2/ URS 21, belonging to nine different families. In addition, the presence of early telia on green leaf tissue was also observed. These signs had been previously observed in association with partial resistance to crown rust and were later confirmed in a study with the cultivar URS 21 and other oat genotypes showing partial resistance to crown rust (Graichen et al. 2011Graichen FAS, Martinelli JA, Wesp CL, Federizzi LC and Chaves MS (2011) Epidemiological and histological components of crown resistance in oat genotypes. European Journal of Plant Pathology 131: 497-510.). Thus, the expectation was that the population under selection could have high levels of partial resistance to crown rust, the most destructive oat crop disease.
The three F5:6 lines were sown in 2007 under the identification numbers 076053-1 to 076053-3. In this year and generation, the 076053-3 line was collected, bulk-threshed and coded as 'UFRGS 076053-3'. The new line was then tested in a preliminary yield trial, which was conducted at the Agronomy Experimental Station of the UFRGS in 2008, and compared with three check cultivars.
The UFRGS 076053-3 line was superior in the preliminary yield trial, and it surpassed the three check cultivars in grain yield and test weight. Thus, the line was promoted to the regional yield trial of oat lines, which was conducted by the Brazilian Oat Research Committee (Comissão Brasileira de Pesquisa de Aveia - CBPA), in 10 locations in the growing season of 2009. In this test, the UFRGS 076053-3 line showed a 5% higher average grain yield than the best check cultivar, which is the minimum required by the standards of the CBPA to move on for testing in the national yield trial of oat lines from the first and second years, which was conducted in 2010 and 2011 in nine locations for each test. In the three years of cooperative tests, the UFRGS 076053-3 line achieved sufficient agronomical merit according to the standards established by the CBPA to be released as a new cultivar, and it received the commercial name URS Brava. The name "Brava" was given because the word means to have or show courage and to have a lack of fear of dangerous or difficult situations. Thus, this name was selected because the cultivar showed high grain yield and stability over the years it was tested as a line and because it showed resistance to crown rust, caused by the fungus Puccinia coronata f. sp. avenae.
AGRONOMICAL PERFORMANCE
In the first year of the grain yield test, which was conducted for the preliminary yield trial in 2008, the UFRGS 076053-3 line was compared with the check cultivars URS 21, URS Guapa and Barbarasul. The best check in the trial was the cultivar URS 21, which had an average grain yield of 3276 kg ha-1. The UFRGS 076053-3 line had an average grain yield of 4065 kg ha-1, corresponding to 124.1% of the best check. The UFRGS 076053-3 line also stood out with regard to its test weight (TW), which was 55.7 kg hL-1, compared with the best check for this trait, which was also URS 21 and had a TW of 50.6 kg hL-1, corresponding to a 110% increase of the best check.
The results for the grain yield, TW and thousand kernel weight (TKW) traits obtained for the UFRGS 076053-3 line and check cultivars evaluated in the regional yield trial of oat lines (2009) and the national yield trial of oat lines from the first and second years (2010 and 2011), as well as the number of locations where the experiments were conducted in each test are shown in Table 1. In the regional test, the UFRGS 076053-3 line was compared with the check cultivars URS 21, URS Guapa and Barbarasul in 10 experiments to determine the grain yield trait. These cultivars are representative of the oat crops in the states of Rio Grande do Sul, Paraná and São Paulo. The cultivar URS 21 was the best check, and it had an average grain yield of 2637 kg ha-1, whereas the UFRGS 076053-3 line had an average grain yield of 2890 kg ha-1, which corresponded to 109.6% of the best check. The cultivar URS 21 was the best check, and it had an average TW of 46.6 kg hL-1, whereas the UFRGS 076053-3 line had an average TW of 51.7 kg hL-1, which corresponded to 111% of the best check. The cultivar URS Guapa was the best check with regards to TKW, with an average value of 32.7 g, whereas the UFRGS 076053-3 line obtained an average TKW of 29.7 g, which is equivalent to 90.8% of the URS Guapa (Table 1). The results for grain yield described above indicate that the UFRGS 076053-3 line met the standards of the CBPA, in which lines that achieve a grain yield equal to or greater than 5% of the best check when averaged according to environments can be advanced to the next test stage (Federizzi et al. 2012Federizzi LC, Carbonell SAM, Pacheco MT and Nava IC (2012) Breeders' work after cultivar development - the stage of recommendation. Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology S2: 67-74.).
In the national yield trial of oat lines from the first and second year, which was conducted in 2010, the UFRGS 076053-3 line was compared with the URS 21, URS Guapa and Barbarasul check cultivars in nine experiments for the grain yield trait. The cultivar Barbarasul was the best check and presented an average grain yield of 3465 kg ha-1, whereas the line UFRGS 076053-3 had an average grain yield of 3438 kg ha-1. Although the grain yield of the UFRGS 076053-3 line was similar to that of the best check, it was smaller and therefore corresponded to 99.2% of the best check. For the test weight, URS 21 was the best check with a TW of 49 kg hL-1, and UFRGS 076053-3 had a TW of 52.2 kg hL-1, which corresponded to 106.4% of the best check. For the TKW, the cultivar URS Guapa was the best check and had a TKW of 30.8 g, and the line UFRGS 076053-3 line achieved a TKW of 29.6 g, which corresponded to 96% of the best check (Table 1).
In the national yield trial of oat lines from the second year, which was conducted in 2011, the grain yield of the UFRGS 076053-3 line was compared with those of the URS 21, Barbarasul and URS Taura check cultivars in nine experiments. The URS 21 cultivar was the best check and presented an average grain yield of 3891 kg ha-1, whereas the UFRGS 076053-3 line had an average grain yield of 3964 kg ha-1, which corresponded to 101.9% of the best check. For the test weight, the best check was URS 21, which had a TW of 51.7 kg hL-1, whereas the UFRGS 076053-3 line obtained a TW of 55.1 kg hL-1, which corresponded to 106.6% of the best check. The URS Taura cultivar was the best check with a TKW of 31.6 g, and the UFRGS 076053-3 line achieved a TKW of 32.5 g, which corresponded to 102.9% of the best check (Table 1).
Considering the three years of tests of the Value for Cultivation and Use (VCU), the UFRGS 076053-3 line was tested for grain yield in 28 experiments, and it achieved an average yield of 3431 kg ha-1. Thus, the UFRGS 076053-3 line showed a 103.6% yield compared with that of the average of the best check cultivar from each year. When the line was compared with the best check averaged over time, which was URS 21, UFRGS 076053- 3 showed a 104.7% yield (Table 1). These results demonstrate the high adaptability and grain yield stability of the cultivar URS Brava cultivar over the years and across the environments it was tested.
The cycle of the line UFRGS 076053-3, which is expressed by the number of days from emergence to heading was 86, 77 and 87 days on average in 2009, 2010 and 2011, respectively, with an average of 83.5 days in the three test years. When the UFRGS 076053-3 line was compared with the check cultivar URS 21, the line showed a cycle delayed by approximately two days in annual averages. For the number of days from emergence to maturation, the UFRGS 076053-3 line showed a cycle delayed by one day compared with URS 21 (Table 2). These results show that the cycle of the UFRGS 076053-3 line is similar to that of the check cultivars evaluated during the testing period. For plant height, the UFRGS 076053-3 line was slightly higher than the tallest check cultivar URS 21 over the three test years (Table 2).
The grain yield stability of the URS Brava cultivar can be attributed mainly to its partial resistance to crown rust. Under the subtropical conditions of southern Brazil, crown rust is devastating, and a near total loss can be observed in crops that have not been treated with fungicide due to the loss of resistance to this disease. After its release, the cultivar URS Brava was tested in the national yield trial of oat cultivars with and without the application of fungicide, under the coordination of the CBPA. The data obtained in these tests in 2012 and 2013 for averages of grain yields and test weights are shown in Table 3, for the cultivars URS Brava (partially resistant to crown rust) and URS Fapa Slava (susceptible to crown rust). Greater grain yield stability was observed in the average values according to location and time for URS Brava compared with URS Fapa Slava. The average values for the 31 experiments showed that the grain yield for URS Brava without the application of fungicide suffered a reduction of only 12.7% compared with the yield following treatment with fungicide; however, an average loss of 57.4% was observed in the grain yield for URS Fapa Slava following treatment without fungicide (Table 3).
The higher grain yield stability without the application of fungicide for the URS Brava cultivar can also be observed based on the standard deviation from the averages of this trait in each experiment, which was approximately 43% of the observed averages, whereas URS Fapa Slava achieved standard deviations of approximately 82% of the averages. With the application of fungicide, both cultivars showed a standard deviation of grain yield corresponding to approximately 38% of the averages for this trait in the different experiments of the test of oat cultivars in 2012 and 2013 (Table 3).
The national yield trial of oat cultivars was conducted in 17 locations in southern Brazil, where the environmental conditions differed for the development of crown rust; thus, in certain locations, the grain yield did not show differences between the treatments with and without fungicide for any of the cultivars. However, in locations favorable to the development of crown rust, the reductions in grain yield were up to 89.4% for the susceptible cultivars, whereas for the URS Brava cultivar, a maximum reduction of 34.3% in grain yield was observed (Table 3).
Similarly, the average reductions in the test weight were only 2.9% for URS Brava and 20.4% for URS Fapa Slava for the 19 experiments conducted between 2012 and 2013, in 12 different locations in southern Brazil. In addition, reductions were not detected in the test weight of grains in certain locations without the application of fungicide, which is consistent with the results for grain yield. However, the maximum decrease in the test weight without the application of fungicide was 25% for URS Brava, whereas it was almost double that value for URS Fapa Slava (Table 3). The standard deviation of the average test weight values without fungicide for the different locations and test years showed a similar pattern to that observed for the grain yield compared with the overall test weight average. The test weight trait value for the cultivar susceptible to crown rust (URS Fapa Slava) was approximately 20% compared with 10% for URS Brava (Table 3).
After the commercial release, the cultivar URS Brava was registered in the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply (Ministério da Agricultura, Pecuária e Abastecimento - MAPA) under number 32338, and a protection certificate was issued by the National Service for Cultivar Protection (Serviço Nacional de Proteção de Cultivares) under number 20140186 on December 19, 2014. The production and distribution of seeds from the URS Brava cultivar followed the flowchart used by the Oat Breeding Program of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS) as described by Federizzi et al. (2012Federizzi LC, Carbonell SAM, Pacheco MT and Nava IC (2012) Breeders' work after cultivar development - the stage of recommendation. Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology S2: 67-74.).
REFERENCES
- Bertagnolli PF and Federizzi LC (1994) Cruzamentos artificiais em aveia. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira 29: 601-606.
- CONAB - Companhia Nacional de Abastecimento (2015) Série histórica de área, produtividade e produção de trigo. Available at < Available at http://www.conab.gov.br >. Accessed in Feb 2015.
» http://www.conab.gov.br - FAOSTAT - Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database (2015) Available at <Available at http://faostat3.fao.org/download/Q/QC/E >. Accessed in Feb 2015.
» http://faostat3.fao.org/download/Q/QC/E - Federizzi LC, Carbonell SAM, Pacheco MT and Nava IC (2012) Breeders' work after cultivar development - the stage of recommendation. Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology S2: 67-74.
- Graichen FAS, Martinelli JA, Wesp CL, Federizzi LC and Chaves MS (2011) Epidemiological and histological components of crown resistance in oat genotypes. European Journal of Plant Pathology 131: 497-510.
- Locatelli AB, Federizzi LC, Milach SCK and McElroy AR (2007) Flowering time in oat: genotype characterization for photoperiod and vernalization response. Field Crops Research 106: 242-247.
- Nava IC, Wight CP, Pacheco MT, Federizzi LC and Tinker NA (2012) Tagging and mapping candidate loci for vernalization and flower initiation in hexaploid oat. Molecular Breeding 30: 1295-1312.
- Nava IC, Delatorre CA, Duarte ITL, Pacheco MT and Federizzi LC (2006) Inheritance of aluminium tolerance and its effects on grain yield and grain quality in oats (Avena sativa L.). Euphytica 148: 353-358.
- Zambonato F, Federizzi LC, Pacheco MT, Arruda MP and Martinelli JA (2012) Phenotypic and genetic characterization of partial resistance to crown rust in Avena sativa L. Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology12: 261-268.
Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
Sept 2015
History
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Received
10 Mar 2015 -
Accepted
31 May 2015