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Strategy to identify resistance to white mould associated with high yield for irrigated common bean in Brazil
Authors:Renan C Lima  Pablo H Teixeira  Ari F F Souza  Trazilbo J Paula Júnior  Hudson Teixeira  Miller S Lehner  José E S Carneiro  Tiago S Marçal  Rogerio F Vieira
Institution:1. Departamento de Fitotecnia, Universidade Federal de Viçosa (UFV), Viçosa, Brazil;2. Empresa de Pesquisa Agropecuária de Minas Gerais (Epamig), Viçosa, Brazil;3. Programa de Pós-graduacão em Genética e Melhoramento, UFV, Viçosa, Brazil;4. Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa) / Epamig, Viçosa, Brazil
Abstract:Development of common bean cultivars with partial white mould resistance through breeding techniques has been a challenge in Brazil. As yet, lines/cultivars from breeding programmes have not been investigated for resistance; therefore, this study screened 107 lines/cultivars for their reactions to white mould in 14 preliminary trials conducted under irrigation. Thirteen resistant lines/cultivars (three of Andean origin) and six Mesoamerican cultivars (three intermediately resistant and three susceptible) were selected for further investigation. These lines/cultivars and the resistant control A195 were evaluated in six advanced trials and two straw tests to assess the effectiveness of the screening procedure. In 11 preliminary trials, screenings were performed under moderate/high or higher disease pressure. These pressures occurred in two advanced trials in which, when yields were averaged across moderate/high and high pressures, 10 Mesoamerican lines/cultivars selected for resistance yielded 14%, 23%, and 38% more than intermediately resistant cultivars, A195, and susceptible cultivars, with median disease ratings (1–9 scale) of 4.5, 5.7, 5.7, and 6.7, respectively. In the straw test, three Andean lines/cultivars (A195 included) and two susceptible cultivars in the field were among those with the highest levels of physiological resistance. Thus, field rating under high disease pressure and greenhouse rating did not correlate significantly, suggesting that field trials are critical to evaluating resistance and to identifying high-yielding beans. Therefore, lines/cultivars from breeding programmes assessed in field trials may provide a low cost and fast way to identify high-yielding bean cultivars with partial resistance to white mould in the subtropical southern hemisphere.
Keywords:dry bean  escape mechanisms  genetic resistance  Phaseolus vulgaris  Sclerotinia sclerotiorum  sclerotinia stem rot
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