eprintid: 53
rev_number: 11
eprint_status: archive
userid: 1
dir: disk0/00/00/00/53
datestamp: 2011-05-30 08:25:30
lastmod: 2011-06-10 09:12:46
status_changed: 2011-05-30 08:25:30
type: article
metadata_visibility: show
contact_email: Library-ICRISAT@cgiar.org
item_issues_count: 0
creators_name: Rabbi, I Y
creators_name: Parzies, H K
creators_name: Kiambi, D
creators_name: Haussmann, B I G
creators_name: Folkertsma, R
creators_name: Giger, H
icrisatcreators_name: Haussmann, B I G
affiliation: ICRISAT(Nairobi)
affiliation: Univ Hohenheim(Stuttgart)
affiliation: International Livestock Research Institute(Nairobi)
affiliation: ICRISAT(Bamako)
country: Kenya
country: Germany
country: Mali
title: Experimental studies on pollen-mediated gene flow in Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench using male-sterile bait plants
ispublished: pub
subjects: s1.4
full_text_status: restricted
keywords: sorghum; pollen dispersal; gene flow; flowering characteristics
agrotags: Agrotags - sorghum | planting | crops | genes | winds | genetics | farms | experimentation | seasons | transgenics
Fishtags - NOT-AVAILABLE
Geopoliticaltags - kenya | africa | ethiopia | maine | china | texas | centre
note: This work is part of the PhD thesis of the first author who was funded
by a Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD) scholarship
in the framework of the project �Arresting the scourge of Striga in
Africa by combining the strengths of marker-assisted selection and
farmer participatory breeding of farmer preferred sorghum varieties�
funded by the Bundesministerium fu¨ r Wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit
und Entwicklung (BMZ), Bonn. We sincerely wish to thank Joseph
Muange, Mohammed Somo, and all the staff of the International
Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Kiboko Field
Station, Kenya, for their excellent technical assistance during the field
experiments. We thank the anonymous reviewers who provided
tremendous help by through important, accurate, and constructive
suggestions for making this manuscript more comprehensible.
abstract: Information on the potential of pollen mediated gene flow (PMGF) in sorghum is required for ensuring varietal purity and to mitigate risk transgenic gene flow. Replicated trials were conducted in Kenya using a local landrace, 'Ochuti' as pollen donor surrounded by male-sterile pollen baits. Frequency of PMGF decreased with the increase of distance from pollen sources and was significantly influenced by wind direction and speed. Anther dehiscence correlated with increase in vapour pressure deficit in the morning. A negative exponential regression model with logarithmic transformation of PMGF and square-root transformation of distance from source field best fitted the data. Up to 50% of female florets on a male sterile (MS) plant were pollinated at 1 m from pollen source and declined to 14% at 10 m. The maximum distance of PMGF using the PMGF model, based on a threshold of one seed per MS plant, was 203 m when data above the 95th percentile is considered. However, in the presence of self-produced pollen of male-fertile target plants, the possibility of long-distance cross-pollination may be very low.
date: 2011
date_type: published
publication: Plant Breeding
volume: 130
number: 2
publisher: Blackwell Publishing
pagerange: 217-224
refereed: TRUE
official_url: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0523.2010.01775.x
related_url_url: http://scholar.google.co.in/scholar?hl=en&q=allintitle%3A+%22Experimental+studies+on+pollen-mediated+gene+flow+in+Sorghum+bicolor+%28L.%29+Moench+using+male-sterile+bait+plants%22&btnG=Search&as_sdt=0%2C5&as_ylo=&as_vis=0
related_url_type: author
citation: Rabbi, I Y and Parzies, H K and Kiambi, D and Haussmann, B I G and Folkertsma, R and Giger, H (2011) Experimental studies on pollen-mediated gene flow in Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench using male-sterile bait plants. Plant Breeding, 130 (2). pp. 217-224.
document_url: http://oar.icrisat.org/53/1/Rabbi_et_al_2010.pdf