Maize Genetics Cooperation
Newsletter vol 86 2012
ALLEGANY, NEW YORK
J.Karl Maize
Heterosis
and the night-length reaction: effect of the night-length reaction on the plant
height of the tallest strains of the maize subspecies
--Karl,
JR
Heterosis is known to be negative for the trait of
short-night reaction in maize. This
may mean that an F1 will be shorter than the parents in relation to the degree
of heterosis when crossing extremely reactive
strains; the height difference is due to a change in leaf quantity. This height
heterosis evidently does not have a substantial
effect in crosses with or within the Tehua race,
though inbreeding Tehua may significantly reduce
plant height (by perhaps 4.5 meters [m]).
The heterosis is, however, evident within the Monta�a race.
Two
tall strains of Tehua (Chiapas 234 and NSL 2825,
under short night) were crossed and the F1 had the same relative height and quantity
of leaves (roughly 48). When
crossed with a shorter strain, the F1 was shorter (~10.5 m, mature
height). This possible absence of heterosis also occurs when the Tehua
is crossed with other tallest strains.
For example, a cross was made of the populations Chiapas 234 with
Ecuador 689, which is of the Montana race.
A plant from the cross was permitted to attain the height of 8 m and at
that height the whorl exhibited no indication of tasseling, similar to the
parent strains. (Indication of tasseling entails the whorl irregularities of
being tightly funneled, with upright leaves, irregular leaf spacing, creases, and
forked tips, as well as nodal protrusion from leaf sheaths.) A shorter Montana likewise makes a
shorter F1 (~10.5 m). 234 crosses
(with other tallest strains e.g., Veracruz 406, from the race Coscomatepec) grow 5.25 m on uncultivated grassy ground in
Costa Rica under natural night length (where 234 is still reactive). Two tall strains of Montana
(Ecuador 573, 689) were crossed.
The F1 matured at an 8-m plant height, whereas the F2 exhibited no
indication of flowering at 7.7 m.
The F2 thus matures at a height similar to that of the parent
populations (~10.7-12 m).
As
maize plant height comprises not only tassel size and internode quantity, but also
internode length, aside from the effect of night length in these maizes, it is interesting to note that the peak internode
length on some hybrids with or within the Montana race is 44.5 cm (Figure 1)(cf.
3 consecutive internodes of >43.3 cm with the Jala
race), and is 38.5 cm for the Tehua 234 (Figure 2), which
is ostensibly not party to such heterosis (perchance
2825 is 234) (Figures 3, 4). It
seems that Montana offers many tallest strains of maize; however, it has
particularly long internodes, even in the field (.36 m); Tehua
seems to be the opposite. Heterosis increases the appearance of ears in these
extremely short-night-reactive backgrounds, as is usual for the subspecies in
general. This is also a case study in
salvaging repository accessions (with genetic diversity inadequate for a population)
by hybridizing 2 of them.
Figure 1.
Trend of internode-length profile of tall strains of
Montana.
Figure 2.
Trend of internode-length arcade of tall strains of Tehua.
Figure 3.
Compared trends of internode-length arcade of tall strains of Tehua and Montana.
Figure 4.
Internode-length data for stalks from tall strains of Tehua and Montana.
Please Note: Notes
submitted to the Maize Genetics Cooperation Newsletter may be cited only with
consent of authors.