Market Intelligence
for the World's
Agriculture Industry
Since 1988
 STAT Specialty Crop News - Covering the world since 1988!
Subscribe Now!
For full site access

Lost Password?
Customer Center

Trade Directory

Special Crops
Beans
Lentils
Peas
Chickpeas
Birdseed
Mustard & Other
Spices & Herbs
Dried Fruit & Nuts
Supply-Demand

The rest of Agriculture
Bio-Energy
Commentary
Grain
Oilseed
Livestock
Poultry
Cotton & Wool
Fresh Fruit & Vegetables
Dried Fruit & Nuts
Dairy
Technology
General
Organic
Just for Growers

Cash Markets
Futures Markets
Weather
Price Graphs
Export Data
Supply-Demand



Subscribe Today!
Privacy Policy
Subscriber Agreement

Ag Links
Affiliates
Add Headlines!
To your website!


Frost Tolerant Oats Genotypes Found

WASHINGTON - Feb 28/05 - SNS -- USDA researchers have identified two oat genotypes which are more freeze-tolerant under controlled field tests than any variety released during the past 65 years.

Plant physiologist David P. Livingston, with the ARS Plant Science Research Laboratory, and plant breeder Paul Murphy at North Carolina State University -- both in Raleigh, N.C. -- reported the findings in the journal Crop Science.

Among fall-sown grain crops, oats are much less winter hardy than wheat, barley and rye. Sustained temperatures at or below 20 degrees Fahrenheit usually result in yield losses.

The scientists screened lines produced from the cross of two historic U.S. winter oats: Wintok, released in 1940, and Norline, released in 1960.

Starting with 10,000 plants from the two varieties, the researchers used progressively lower temperatures to screen for the toughest lines. Two of the new lines, WN1 and WN10, were more winter-hardy than either of the two hardy cultivars from which they were crossed. Despite their superior freezing tolerance, neither germplasm was late-flowering, a trait commonly linked to freeze tolerance.

The scientists suspect that each of the parent cultivars possessed different alleles for freezing tolerance, and that those alleles were combined into a single genotype. Alleles are natural variations of a particular gene among members of the same species.

These germplasm lines have alleles that allow regenerative cells within the plant crown to sufficiently resist ice and cold. The crown is the area where a plant's root and stem meet, and it contains various compounds that are critical to the plant's regrowth after winter.

Increased winter hardiness among oat varieties could allow farmers as far north as Pennsylvania and Ohio to grow winter oats in the future. The germplasm is being used by breeders to cross with high-yielding, disease-resistant varieties.


Subcribers get complete access to all articles and special sections on the STATpub website.

To subscribe just click on Subscribe Now!


Add AgMarket News headlines
to your site



Use of Information

Copyright © 1988-2008 STAT Communications Ltd., Canada. All Rights Reserved. This information may not be republished in part of in full in any form whatsoever without the prior written consent of STAT Communications Ltd. The article on this page may not be harvested and reprinted on any website. However, we encourage links back to this or any other public article on our website.



Disclaimer

The information in this article is provided without any warranty of any kind whatsoever. By accessing this service, you agree that STAT Communications Ltd. will not be liable for any expenses, losses or costs that may be incurred by the interpretation and use of the information in this website, nor as a result of the information on this site being inaccurate or incomplete in any way.



Click here to set STATpub.com as your browser's home page!
Copyright © 2008 STAT Communications Ltd., Canada.All rights reserved. Terms & Conditions
Send us your comments.
Privacy Policy
Links Directory