Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixation

An overview is given for an ongoing maize breeding program that improves populations, inbreds, and hybrids in the Midwestern USA. Breeding and selection occurred under biodynamic conditions in Wisconsin, on an organic winter nursery in Puerto Rico, a biodynamic winter nursery in Hawaii, and a conven...

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Main Authors: Goldstein W., Jaradat A.A., Hurburgh C., Pollak L.M., Goodman M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2019-07-01
Series:Open Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opag-2019-0030
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spelling doaj-cd3812cb06a04a1e9f975b79b21181f92021-09-05T20:51:16ZengDe GruyterOpen Agriculture2391-95312019-07-014132234510.1515/opag-2019-0030opag-2019-0030Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixationGoldstein W.0Jaradat A.A.1Hurburgh C.2Pollak L.M.3Goodman M.4Mandaamin Institute, Elkhorn, WI, USAUSDA-ARS North Central Soil Conservation Research Lab, Morris, Minnesota;Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa;Windy Acres Genetics, Guthrie Center, Iowa;Crop and Soil Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina.An overview is given for an ongoing maize breeding program that improves populations, inbreds, and hybrids in the Midwestern USA. Breeding and selection occurred under biodynamic conditions in Wisconsin, on an organic winter nursery in Puerto Rico, a biodynamic winter nursery in Hawaii, and a conventional winter nursery in Chile. Emphasis is on improving protein quality, carotenoid content, competitiveness with weeds, nitrogen (N) efficiency/N2 fixation, and cross incompatibility to pollen from genetically engineered (GE) maize. Philosophy is that the plant species is a responding partner in the breeding process. Adaptation and selection emphasizes vigor and yield under N limited conditions. The Ga1 and Tcb1 alleles were utilized to induce cross incompatibility. The program resulted in inbreds and hybrids with increased N efficiency and protein quality coupled with softer grain texture, more chlorophyll in foliage, and densely branched root growth in the topsoil relative to conventionally bred cultivars under N limited conditions. Grain protein quality was improved by utilizing opaque kernels that emerged in populations during the course of the program in surprisingly high frequencies. N efficiency was accentuated by breeding with landraces that may fix N2 with microbes coupled with selection for response traits under N-limited conditions. When grown next to conventional hybrids, the best hybrids from this program have exhibited 30% more methionine and 16% more protein in grain and more protein/ha.https://doi.org/10.1515/opag-2019-0030methioninegametophytic incompatibilityepigeneticsisolation by environment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Goldstein W.
Jaradat A.A.
Hurburgh C.
Pollak L.M.
Goodman M.
spellingShingle Goldstein W.
Jaradat A.A.
Hurburgh C.
Pollak L.M.
Goodman M.
Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixation
Open Agriculture
methionine
gametophytic incompatibility
epigenetics
isolation by environment
author_facet Goldstein W.
Jaradat A.A.
Hurburgh C.
Pollak L.M.
Goodman M.
author_sort Goldstein W.
title Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixation
title_short Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixation
title_full Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixation
title_fullStr Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixation
title_full_unstemmed Breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and N efficiency/N2 fixation
title_sort breeding maize under biodynamic-organic conditions for nutritional value and n efficiency/n2 fixation
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Agriculture
issn 2391-9531
publishDate 2019-07-01
description An overview is given for an ongoing maize breeding program that improves populations, inbreds, and hybrids in the Midwestern USA. Breeding and selection occurred under biodynamic conditions in Wisconsin, on an organic winter nursery in Puerto Rico, a biodynamic winter nursery in Hawaii, and a conventional winter nursery in Chile. Emphasis is on improving protein quality, carotenoid content, competitiveness with weeds, nitrogen (N) efficiency/N2 fixation, and cross incompatibility to pollen from genetically engineered (GE) maize. Philosophy is that the plant species is a responding partner in the breeding process. Adaptation and selection emphasizes vigor and yield under N limited conditions. The Ga1 and Tcb1 alleles were utilized to induce cross incompatibility. The program resulted in inbreds and hybrids with increased N efficiency and protein quality coupled with softer grain texture, more chlorophyll in foliage, and densely branched root growth in the topsoil relative to conventionally bred cultivars under N limited conditions. Grain protein quality was improved by utilizing opaque kernels that emerged in populations during the course of the program in surprisingly high frequencies. N efficiency was accentuated by breeding with landraces that may fix N2 with microbes coupled with selection for response traits under N-limited conditions. When grown next to conventional hybrids, the best hybrids from this program have exhibited 30% more methionine and 16% more protein in grain and more protein/ha.
topic methionine
gametophytic incompatibility
epigenetics
isolation by environment
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opag-2019-0030
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