Stigma and Glume Characteristics Synergistically Determine the Stigma Exsertion Rate in Thermo-Photo-Sensitive Genic Male Sterile Wheat
Hongsheng Li, Zhonghui Yang, Shaoxiang Li, Ahmed M. S. Elfanah, Sedhom Abdelkhalik, Xiong Tang, Jian Yin, Mingliang Ding, Kun Liu, Mujun Yang, Xiue Wang

TL;DR
This study shows that stigma and glume features in wheat influence stigma exsertion, which is key to improving hybrid seed production efficiency.
Contribution
The study identifies specific floral traits that correlate with stigma exsertion in thermo-photo-sensitive male sterile wheat lines.
Findings
Stigma length and glume width/length–width ratio strongly correlate with stigma exsertion rate (SER).
Florets with exserted stigmas had significantly higher out-crossing ability than non-exserted ones.
Lines with higher SER produced a disproportionately large share of cross-pollinated seeds.
Abstract
Wheat hybrids have been widely demonstrated to have remarkable heterosis or hybrid vigor in increasing yield potential and stability since the 1960s. Two-line hybrid wheat can achieve higher yields than local varieties, especially in marginal environments. However, the commercial application of hybrid wheat is hindered by higher seed costs, primarily due to lower yields in hybrid seed production. Stigma exsertion has been verified as a decisive factor in increasing rice’s hybrid seed yield, but more investigation is needed in hybrid wheat breeding and production. In this study, four thermo-photo-sensitive genic male sterile lines, including K41S, K64S, K66S, and K68S, with different stigma exsertion rates (SERs) were used to compare the differences in floral architecture relative to stigma exsertion over two growing seasons. The results revealed that the K41S and K64S exhibited a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWheat and Barley Genetics and Pathology · Genetics and Plant Breeding · Crop Yield and Soil Fertility
