Ecophysiological Analysis of Cultivated Rice and Australian Wild Oryza

Ecophysiological Analysis of Cultivated Rice and Australian Wild Oryza

Photosynthesis And Water-Use, Growth And Biomass Allocation Patterns Under Current And Projected [CO2]

LAP Lambert Academic Publishing ( 2014-02-03 )

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Australian wild rices are adapted to a wide range of environmental and climatic conditions. As a result they have traits that can confer fitness benefits under adverse environmental conditions. These are likely to provide an important genetic resource to rice breeders as the human population increases and demand for rice accelerates. This study examined the evolutionary divergence in photosynthetic capacity and water-use characteristics, growth, biomass allocation traits and yield by comparing three Oryza meridionalis ecotypes from a broad latitudinal range across northern Australia, and one accession of O. australiensis, with an Australian cultivated rice - Oryza sativa spp. japonica cv. Amaroo. The study found that the hydrological regime exerts a strong selection pressure on the wild Oryza populations of Australia giving rise to differences in plant characteristics. The present study identifies ruderal characteristics in O. meridionalis (Keep River NT), some of which have been used in domestication of crops. Also previously found in a range of wild cereal progenitors, in this analysis, some of these traits were also identified in cultivated O. sativa cv. Amaroo .

Book Details:

ISBN-13:

978-3-659-51511-8

ISBN-10:

3659515116

EAN:

9783659515118

Book language:

English

By (author) :

Juliet Suich

Number of pages:

360

Published on:

2014-02-03

Category:

Ecology