Hybrid Breeding for Restoration of Threatened Forest Trees: Evidence for Incorporating Disease Tolerance in .

Front Plant Sci

Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States.

Published: October 2020

Hybridization is a potential tool for incorporating stress tolerance in plants, particularly to pests and diseases, in support of restoration and conservation efforts. Butternut () is a species for which hybridization has only recently begun being explored. This North American hardwood tree is threatened due to (), the causal fungus of butternut canker disease (BCD), first observed in 1967. Observational evidence in some wild populations indicates that naturalized hybrids of with Japanese walnut () may be more tolerant to BCD than non-admixed , but this has not been formally tested in a controlled trial. We aimed to examine potential BCD tolerance within and between and × hybrids and to determine if there is a difference in canker growth between BCD fungal isolates. Five-year-old and hybrid trees were inoculated with two fungal isolates collected from natural infections found in two different sites in Indiana, United States, and a blank control (agar only). Measurements of both artificially induced and naturally occurring cankers were taken at 8-, 12-, 20-, 24-, and 32-month post-inoculation. Differences in canker presence/absence and size were observed by fungal isolate, which could help explain some of the differences in BCD severity seen between populations. Smaller and fewer cankers and greater genetic gains were seen in hybrid families, demonstrating that hybrids warrant further evaluation as a possible breeding tool for developing BCD-resistant trees.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7596304PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.580693DOI Listing

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