AI Article Synopsis

  • The genus Brachiaria is primarily made up of polyploid plants, with most being tetraploid and reproducing through apomixis, while diploids are sexually reproductive.
  • To work around compatibility issues in breeding, diploid accessions are converted to tetraploid to serve as female parents.
  • The study focuses on the microsporogenesis in an artificially induced tetraploid Brachiaria ruziziensis, highlighting irregular chromosome segregation and a high pollen sterility rate of 61.38%, which poses challenges for its use in breeding programs.

Article Abstract

The genus Brachiaria is characterized by a majority of polyploid accessions--mainly tetraploid--and apomictic reproduction. Sexuality is found among diploids. To overcome incompatibility barriers, accessions with the same ploidy level are necessarily used in hybridization. Thus, sexual diploid accessions were tetraploidized to be used as female genitors. This paper reports microsporogenesis in an artificially induced tetraploid accession of Brachiaria ruziziensis. Chromosome pairing at diakinesis ranged from univalents to tetravalents, with predominance of bivalents. Irregular chromosome segregation was frequent in both meiotic divisions. During the first division, multiple spindles showing different arrangements were recorded. The spindle position determined the plane of first cytokinesis and the number of chromosomes determined the size of the cell. Meiotic products were characterized by polyads with spores of different sizes. Pollen sterility was estimated at 61.38%. The limitations of using this accession in the breeding program are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00299-004-0867-yDOI Listing

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