dc.description.abstract |
Increase in yield potential in rice has been lately converted in developing genotypes with larger sink
size, i.e. bigger and more compact panicles. Incidentally, filling efficiency of such genotypes is lower
than that of check varieties. Alternatively, better sink regulation has been recognized as a way to
improve grain yield. Sink regulation can be defined as the timing at which the plant switch on/off sinks
and reinforce/reduce active sinks, where main sinks are leaves and roots at vegetative, internodes,
panicles and reserves at reproductive, and spikelets at grain filling. At vegetative, early tiller production
is essential to establish quick leaf area coverage, and significant reduction in grain yield is measured in
case tillering is delayed by late transplanting or transient stressed conditions. In addition, earlier
cessation of tiller production has been reported as a key process to promote larger panicle size (qTSN4
QTL) and higher resource remobilisation during grain filling (hybrid rice). At later stage, positive
correlations between grain yield and filling efficiency (as long as genotypes with the same potential
sink size are compared) highlights that increasing filling efficiency is a promising option. The higher
compactness of the panicles of newly bred genotypes exacerbates the internal competition between
spikelets and reduces filling efficiency. Indeed, the dominant effect of the apical above basal spikelets
is more detrimental in compact panicles where higher ethylene concentration in basal and secondary
spikelets reduce starch formation. Would any diversity in panicle architecture or peduncle section
reduce internal competition and increase filling efficiency? |
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