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Inheritance of Scent in American Long Grain Rice 1
Author(s) -
Berner D. K.,
Hoff B. J.
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
crop science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.76
H-Index - 147
eISSN - 1435-0653
pISSN - 0011-183X
DOI - 10.2135/cropsci1986.0011183x002600050008x
Subject(s) - biology , cultivar , oryza sativa , germination , aroma , botany , inheritance (genetic algorithm) , horticulture , stamen , pollen , genetics , food science , gene
Scented or aromatic rice ( Oryza sativa L.) is highly valued in many areas of the world, but the development of high yielding scented cultivars has been limited by a lack of information on the inheritance of scent. Reciprocal crosses were made between the scented cultivar ‘Della’ and the nonscented cultivar ‘Dawn’ to study the inheritanceof scent in rice. Leaf tissue and seed samples from plants of the parental cultivars and of F 1 and F 2 progeny were placed in 0.3 mol L −1 KOH solution and rated for strength of aroma. The results indicated that the F 1 plants were nonscented and the F 2 populations segregated in a 3:1( nonscented:scented)r atio. Individual seeds from F 1 plants were chewed and rated as scented or nonscented and the results showed that, due to xenia, the seeds from the heterozygous F 1 plants also segregated in a 31 (nonscented:scented) ratio. Of 992 F 2 seeds individually rated for scent, 748 were nonscented and 244 were scented. Chewing and rating individual F 3 seeds of F 2 plants confirmed the monogenic recessive inheritance of the scent character. It was found that scent could be detected in half of a single seed by chewing the distal portion while saving the portion of the seed with the embryo. Normal germination, with approximately 80% plant survival in the field, was observed when the embryo portions were planted. The scent character may be transferred into improved cultivars by several methods using the demonstrated ability to identify scented genotypes by chewing individual seeds.