Maize Genetics
Cooperation Newsletter vol 86 2012
ALLEGANY, NEW YORK
J.Karl Maize
The maximum leaf quantity
of the maize subspecies
--Karl, J
Roughly 65 leaves occurred on a 9.5-meter (m) maize plant (height of newest visible leaf, 41st leaf) that had a tassel on the scale of .5 cm (Figure 1). A tassel of that size on a 9.5-m plant is unprecedented; it is 3 m higher than on previously known tallest strains. This means that the new strain may accordingly be 3 m taller (15 m). The genetic background of the plant was primarily accession 234 of Chiapas, Mexico, with the Leafy mutation (chromosome 3, H.Cai, personal communication, 2007) inserted (Figure 2, 3). The plant was cultivated in Allegany, New York, USA under short nights, inside a wooden frame (Figure 4) wrapped with plastic. The genotype was derived by backing the mutation once into the Wellhausen Guatemalan accession 863 and then twice into that of Chiapas 234 when the allele become public in 2003 (one leaf has been lost with each backcross; 17 leaves above-ear originally, then 16, now 15). With a wild-type sib of the 65-leaf plant maturing at 8.5 m (Figure 5), this Leafy strain could stand more back-crossing. The derived genotypes are not available from a public repository.
A second dissected meristem of the material (eared under long night but likely permitting short-night leafy) indicated the possibility that 65 leaves is a low expression level for a segregant with the leafy phenotype. Short-night leafy has not yet been confirmed in the natural materials in a short-night regime. As leafy involves an increased quantity of leaves above the ear (20+ counted in this work, from Leafy and also short-night leafy), it is pertinent to note that the ear height in the natural strains is more than 9.5 m (Figure 6). The (approximately) 7 wild-type leaves above the ear bring the height to 12 m. To developmentally contextualize the tall maizes of the subspecies, it is relevant to note that there was a peak growth rate of 3.7 m in a month. This was in month 3, when the plant height goes from 2.5 to 6.1 m.
Figure 1. The 9.5-m leafy plant.
Figure 2. Throughout the
development of this Leafy strain, the
cobs have branched.
Figure 3. An ear of this Leafy strain.
Figure 5. An 8.5 m, wild-type segregant of this Leafy strain of maize.
Figure 6. This is the author's photo. Left plant: Chapas 234 approaching 10 m; right plant: 234 x 2825 F1 approaching 10.75 m with ear shoot near 9.5 m.
Please Note: Notes submitted to the Maize Genetics Cooperation Newsletter may be cited only with consent of authors.