Assessment of Allelopathic Potential of Cotton Chromosome Substitution Lines
Worlanyo Segbefia, Varsha Singh, Mary Gracen Fuller, Ziming Yue, Fernanda Reolon de Souza, Te Ming Tseng

TL;DR
This study explores cotton lines with altered chromosomes to suppress weed growth, offering a potential alternative to synthetic herbicides.
Contribution
The study identifies specific cotton chromosome substitution lines with weed-suppressive properties against Palmer amaranth.
Findings
CS lines T26lo, BNTN 1-15, and T11sh showed significant suppression of Palmer amaranth height.
TM-1 exhibited the highest chlorophyll reduction in Palmer amaranth (78%).
Enlist was the least effective in suppressing weed growth among tested lines.
Abstract
Weed interference consistently poses a significant agronomic challenge in cotton production, leading to unfavorable direct and indirect consequences. Consequently, the predominant strategy employed to manage weeds is the application of synthetic herbicides. However, this extensive reliance has resulted in the development of herbicide-resistant weed populations due to the prolonged use of a single herbicide and the lack of rotation. This project focused on identifying weed-suppressive cotton chromosome substitution (CS) lines. These CS lines closely resemble the parent TM-1, an upland cotton derivative (Gossypium hirsutum). Each CS line carries a single chromosome or chromosome arm exchanged from G. barbadense, G. tomentosum, or G. mustelinum within the TM-1 background. In a greenhouse experiment utilizing a stepwise approach, five CS lines, along with two conventional varieties (Enlist…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsWeed Control and Herbicide Applications · Research in Cotton Cultivation · Plant tissue culture and regeneration
