AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined morphological and symbiotic traits of six symbiotic pea mutants compared to the original cultivar Rondo over different growth periods.
  • One mutant (K10a) showed lower plant height and vegetative biomass but had superior nodulation and nitrogen fixation, while the remaining five hypemodular mutants performed similarly to or better than Rondo in production capacity.
  • Mutants K1a, K2a, and K27a are identified as beneficial for increasing nitrogen fixation in pea breeding.

Article Abstract

Morphological (plant height and vegetative biomass amount) and symbiotic (number of nodules and nitrogenase activity) traits of six symbiotic pea mutants and the original cultivar Rondo were studied at different vegetation periods. Of the mutants studied, one (K10a) was supemodular and the remaining five (K1a, K2a, K5a, K7a, and K27a) were hypemodular. Essential distinctions in the absolute values and time course of the changes in individual morphological and symbiotic traits of different pea mutants were demonstrated. The supemodular type is inferior to the original cultivar in plant height and production of vegetative biomass, but exceeds it in nodulation and nitrogen fixation. The hypemodular mutants either surpass the original cultivar with respect to the production capacity or display similar results. The symbiotic traits-number of nodules and nitrogen fixation activity--of these mutants are higher compared with the Rondo cultivar. The mutants K1a, K2a, and K27a were demonstrated to be useful in breeding pea for an increase in nitrogen fixation.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

original cultivar
12
nitrogen fixation
12
morphological symbiotic
8
symbiotic traits
8
plant height
8
vegetative biomass
8
pea mutants
8
k1a k2a
8
mutants
6
symbiotic
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!