Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of Zambia

Maize (Zea mays L) is the most important food grain in sub-Saharan Africa and is mostly grown by small-scale farmers under rainfed conditions. Aluminum toxicity caused by low pH is one of the abiotic factors limiting maize production among smallholder farmers. Therefore, breeding maize hybrids that...

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Main Authors: Chanda Richard, Kalaluka Munyinda, Theresa Kinkese, David S. Osiru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-06-01
Series:Agronomy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/5/2/200
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spelling doaj-f9656c245eeb456f8a46bd8887c4d2302021-04-02T02:54:48ZengMDPI AGAgronomy2073-43952015-06-015220021910.3390/agronomy5020200agronomy5020200Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of ZambiaChanda Richard0Kalaluka Munyinda1Theresa Kinkese2David S. Osiru3Seed Control and Certification Institute, P.O. Box 350199, Chilanga 3201, ZambiaDepartment of Plant Science, University of Zambia, P.O. Box 32379, Lusaka 10101, ZambiaDepartment of Plant Science, University of Zambia, P.O. Box 32379, Lusaka 10101, ZambiaCollege of Agriculture and Environmental Science, Makerere University, P.O. Box 7062, Kampala 7010, UgandaMaize (Zea mays L) is the most important food grain in sub-Saharan Africa and is mostly grown by small-scale farmers under rainfed conditions. Aluminum toxicity caused by low pH is one of the abiotic factors limiting maize production among smallholder farmers. Therefore, breeding maize hybrids that are tolerant to aluminum toxicity will sustain and increase maize production in these areas. Hence this study was undertaken to assess the genotypic variation for aluminum toxicity in maize inbred lines. Fourteen maize inbred lines of historical importance that are used in maize hybrid breeding in Zambia were studied for seedling root variation under different aluminum concentrations using hydroponic conditions. The aluminum tolerance membership index based on three traits (actual root length, relative root length and root length response) classified genotypes L3233 and L1214 as highly tolerant, L5527 and ZM421 as tolerant, and L12, L3234, and ZM521 as intermediate. The high PCV, GCV, and heritability observed for the root traits indicate that opportunities for selection and breeding for aluminum tolerance among Zambian inbred lines exist. Furthermore, the study indicated that a higher genetic gain would be expected from net root growth followed by shoot length response as selection traits, thus supporting the use of root traits for aluminum tolerance screening.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/5/2/200maizealuminum toxicityseedling traitsphenotypic coefficient of variationgenotypic coefficient of variation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chanda Richard
Kalaluka Munyinda
Theresa Kinkese
David S. Osiru
spellingShingle Chanda Richard
Kalaluka Munyinda
Theresa Kinkese
David S. Osiru
Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of Zambia
Agronomy
maize
aluminum toxicity
seedling traits
phenotypic coefficient of variation
genotypic coefficient of variation
author_facet Chanda Richard
Kalaluka Munyinda
Theresa Kinkese
David S. Osiru
author_sort Chanda Richard
title Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of Zambia
title_short Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of Zambia
title_full Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of Zambia
title_fullStr Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Genotypic Variation in Seedling Tolerance to Aluminum Toxicity in Historical Maize Inbred Lines of Zambia
title_sort genotypic variation in seedling tolerance to aluminum toxicity in historical maize inbred lines of zambia
publisher MDPI AG
series Agronomy
issn 2073-4395
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Maize (Zea mays L) is the most important food grain in sub-Saharan Africa and is mostly grown by small-scale farmers under rainfed conditions. Aluminum toxicity caused by low pH is one of the abiotic factors limiting maize production among smallholder farmers. Therefore, breeding maize hybrids that are tolerant to aluminum toxicity will sustain and increase maize production in these areas. Hence this study was undertaken to assess the genotypic variation for aluminum toxicity in maize inbred lines. Fourteen maize inbred lines of historical importance that are used in maize hybrid breeding in Zambia were studied for seedling root variation under different aluminum concentrations using hydroponic conditions. The aluminum tolerance membership index based on three traits (actual root length, relative root length and root length response) classified genotypes L3233 and L1214 as highly tolerant, L5527 and ZM421 as tolerant, and L12, L3234, and ZM521 as intermediate. The high PCV, GCV, and heritability observed for the root traits indicate that opportunities for selection and breeding for aluminum tolerance among Zambian inbred lines exist. Furthermore, the study indicated that a higher genetic gain would be expected from net root growth followed by shoot length response as selection traits, thus supporting the use of root traits for aluminum tolerance screening.
topic maize
aluminum toxicity
seedling traits
phenotypic coefficient of variation
genotypic coefficient of variation
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/5/2/200
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