Tuesday, 8 November 2005
13

Designing Cultivar Mixtures to Increase Performance.

Jean-Luc Jannink, Iowa State University, Department of Agronomy, 1208 Agronomy Hall, Ames, IA 50011-1010, Marty L. Carson, USDA-ARS, Cereal Disease Laboratory, 1551 Lindig St., St. Paul, MN 55108, and Jode Edwards, USDA ARS CICG, Department of Agronomy, 1503 Agronomy Hall, Ames, IA 50011.

For a mixture to be effective, it should incorporate functional diversity. One measure of functional diversity is divergent response to a series of environments. Here, environments can be defined in the usual way of a location within year, or in terms of the composition of a pathogen population with which a crop is confronted. Using the former definition, a variety's functional profile is determined by its responses to environments relative to a reference population. This is is GxE reaction. Using the latter definition, a varietie's functional profile is determined by the set of pathogen isolates to which it is resistant. In both cases, a functionally diverse mixture can be obtained by mixing varieties whose functional profiles have a low -- hopefully negative -- correlation. We illustrate this idea with using the resistance specificities of a set of oat cultivars to oat crown rust and by assessing the performance of oat mixtures assembled either to maximize or minimize the covariance of their GxE reactions.

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