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Effects of maturity group and stem growth habit on the branching plasticity of soybean cultivars grown at various planting densities

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posted on 2020-04-24, 13:14 authored by Taiki Yoshihira, Song Liang, Haruka Suzuki, Takuya Kitabatake, Tatsuhiko Shiraiwa

To elucidate the effects of maturity and the stem growth habit on the planting density-dependent branching plasticity of soybean cultivars, we studied the branch traits of 12 cultivars or lines planted at different densities (8.3, 16.7, and 22.2 plants m−2) in Sapporo (2012) and Ebetsu (2013). The 12 cultivars and lines consisted of three determinate cultivars from Hokkaido, three indeterminate cultivars from the northern US, and near-isogenic lines with the backgrounds of Canadian, US, and Japanese cultivars exhibiting diverse stem growth habits. We investigated the relationship between the maturity or stem growth habit and branching plasticity, which was calculated based on the ratios of different branch traits under sparse and dense planting conditions. The use of the ratios of the total branch length and the number of nodes per branch under sparse and dense planting conditions as a measure of branching plasticity revealed varietal differences across years. For the determinate and indeterminate cultivars in both years, branching plasticity was positively correlated with the number of days until stage R5 (onset of seed filling), which is when branches cease to elongate. Comparisons of Japanese and US cultivars and near-isogenic lines for the Dt1 gene (mediating the stem growth habit) indicated that the branching plasticity of indeterminate cultivars and lines is greater than that of determinate cultivars, with a large variation among backgrounds and cultivars. The results of this study imply that branching plasticity is greater in late-maturing soybean cultivars. Moreover, the indeterminate growth habit substantially enhances branching plasticity.

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