Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific Northwest

Diseases and health complications caused by mineral deficiencies afflict billions of people globally. Developing pulse crops with elevated seed mineral concentrations can contribute to reducing the incidence of these deficiencies. The objectives of this study were to estimate variance components con...

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Main Authors: George J. Vandemark, Michael A. Grusak, Rebecca J. McGee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2018-06-01
Series:Crop Journal
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214514118300229
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spelling doaj-050f43f9fefa4302be05aa02e0e049182021-02-02T02:29:12ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Crop Journal2214-51412018-06-0163253262Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific NorthwestGeorge J. Vandemark0Michael A. Grusak1Rebecca J. McGee2USDA-ARS, Grain Legume Genetics and Physiology Research Unit, Pullman, WA 99164, USA; Corresponding author.USDA-ARS, Red River Valley Agricultural Research Center, Fargo, ND 58102, USAUSDA-ARS, Grain Legume Genetics and Physiology Research Unit, Pullman, WA 99164, USADiseases and health complications caused by mineral deficiencies afflict billions of people globally. Developing pulse crops with elevated seed mineral concentrations can contribute to reducing the incidence of these deficiencies. The objectives of this study were to estimate variance components conditioning seed mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil grown in Washington and Idaho, determine correlations between different mineral concentrations and between mineral concentrations and yield, 100-seed weight, and days to flowering, and compare seed mineral concentrations between chickpeas and lentils grown in adjacent plots. Genotype effects, although significant in chickpea and lentil for all minerals except selenium, tended to be minimal compared to location, year, and their interaction effects. In both chickpeas and lentils high positive correlations were observed between seed concentrations of phosphorus and potassium, phosphorus and zinc, and potassium and zinc. Correlations between mineral concentration and yield, and mineral concentration and days to 50% flowering were similar for chickpeas and lentils across the majority of minerals. These results may reflect similarities between the two crops in physiological processes for mineral uptake and partitioning. Lentils had higher concentrations of iron and zinc than chickpea when the two crops were grown in adjacent plots, whereas chickpeas had higher concentrations of calcium and manganese. Plant genotypes that are more efficient at obtaining minerals from growing environments will be useful as parental materials to develop improved chickpea and lentil cultivars that have good yield potential coupled with high seed mineral concentrations. Keywords: Chickpea, Lentil, Mineral, Nutrition, Pulsehttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214514118300229
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author George J. Vandemark
Michael A. Grusak
Rebecca J. McGee
spellingShingle George J. Vandemark
Michael A. Grusak
Rebecca J. McGee
Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
Crop Journal
author_facet George J. Vandemark
Michael A. Grusak
Rebecca J. McGee
author_sort George J. Vandemark
title Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
title_short Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
title_full Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
title_fullStr Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
title_full_unstemmed Mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
title_sort mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil cultivars and breeding lines grown in the u.s. pacific northwest
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Crop Journal
issn 2214-5141
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Diseases and health complications caused by mineral deficiencies afflict billions of people globally. Developing pulse crops with elevated seed mineral concentrations can contribute to reducing the incidence of these deficiencies. The objectives of this study were to estimate variance components conditioning seed mineral concentrations of chickpea and lentil grown in Washington and Idaho, determine correlations between different mineral concentrations and between mineral concentrations and yield, 100-seed weight, and days to flowering, and compare seed mineral concentrations between chickpeas and lentils grown in adjacent plots. Genotype effects, although significant in chickpea and lentil for all minerals except selenium, tended to be minimal compared to location, year, and their interaction effects. In both chickpeas and lentils high positive correlations were observed between seed concentrations of phosphorus and potassium, phosphorus and zinc, and potassium and zinc. Correlations between mineral concentration and yield, and mineral concentration and days to 50% flowering were similar for chickpeas and lentils across the majority of minerals. These results may reflect similarities between the two crops in physiological processes for mineral uptake and partitioning. Lentils had higher concentrations of iron and zinc than chickpea when the two crops were grown in adjacent plots, whereas chickpeas had higher concentrations of calcium and manganese. Plant genotypes that are more efficient at obtaining minerals from growing environments will be useful as parental materials to develop improved chickpea and lentil cultivars that have good yield potential coupled with high seed mineral concentrations. Keywords: Chickpea, Lentil, Mineral, Nutrition, Pulse
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214514118300229
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