scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of environment and genotype on bread-making quality of spring-sown spring wheat cultivars in China

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Chinese SSSW quality could be greatly enhanced through genetic improvement for targeted well-characterized production environments through the influence of genotype, environment, and their interaction.
Abstract
Improvement of end-use quality in bread wheat depends on a thorough understanding of current wheat quality and the influences of genotype (G), environment (E), and genotype by environment interaction (G x E) on quality traits. Thirty-nine spring-sown spring wheat (SSSW) cultivars and advanced lines from China were grown in four agro-ecological zones comprising seven locations during the 1998 and 1999 cropping seasons. Data on 12 major bread-making quality traits were used to investigate the effect of G, E, and G x E on these traits. Wide range variability for protein quantity and quality, starch quality parameters and milling quality in Chinese SSSW was observed. Genotype and environment were found to significantly influence all quality parameters as major effects. Kernel hardness, flour yield, Zeleny sedimentation value and mixograph properties were mainly influenced by the genetic variance components, while thousand kernel weight, test weight, and falling number were mostly influenced by the environmental variance components. Genotype, environment, and their interaction had important effects on test weight, mixing development time and RVA parameters. Cultivars originating from Zone VI (northeast) generally expressed high kernel hardness, good starch quality, but poor milling and medium to weak mixograph performance; those from Zone VII (north) medium to good gluten and starch quality, but low milling quality; those from Zone VIII (central northwest) medium milling and starch quality, and medium to strong mixograph performance; those from Zone IX (western/southwestern Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau) medium milling quality, but poor gluten strength and starch parameters; and those from Zone X (northwest) high milling quality, strong mixograph properties, but low protein content. Samples from Harbin are characterized by good gluten and starch quality, but medium to poor milling quality; those from Hongxinglong by strong mixograph properties, medium to high milling quality, but medium to poor starch quality and medium to low protein content; those from Hohhot by good gluten but poor milling quality; those from Linhe by weak gluten quality, medium to poor milling quality; those from Lanzhou by poor bread-making and starch quality; those from Yongning by acceptable bread-making and starch quality and good milling quality; and those from Urumqi by good milling quality, medium gluten quality and good starch pasting parameters. Our findings suggest that Chinese SSSW quality could be greatly enhanced through genetic improvement for targeted well-characterized production environments.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Genotype and Environment on the Antioxidant Properties of Hard Winter Wheat Bran

TL;DR: The results indicate that each antioxidant property of hard winter wheat bran is influenced differently by genotype and growing conditions, as well as correlations between temperature stress or solar radiation and some antioxidant properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influences of genotype, environment, and genotype×environment interaction on wheat quality

TL;DR: The Australian studies were characterised by a relative lack of G × E, with G and E rankings being similar across the country for the protein quality, dough rheology, and starch quality traits examined in detail, which suggests that, in Australia, more efficient testing of potential cultivars will be possible for these traits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mineral element concentrations in grains of Chinese wheat cultivars

TL;DR: Grain Fe concentration was highly significant and positively correlated with that of Zn, indicating a high possibility to combine high Fe and Zn traits in wheat breeding and strong positive correlations between concentrations of Fe, Zn and protein content.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of the cultivar, environment and management on the grain yield and bread-making quality in winter wheat

TL;DR: The obtained results demonstrate that the grain quality as measured by the parameters based on the protein content and quality may be substantially improved by crop management practices, especially by N fertilization level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of common wheat protein fractions to dough properties and quality of northern-style Chinese steamed bread

TL;DR: This article investigated the association between gluten protein fractions determined by reversed phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and dough properties and northern-style Chinese steamed bread (CSB) quality.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Genotype and Environment Effects on Quality Characteristics of Hard Red Winter Wheat

TL;DR: To determine relative contributions of genotype, environment, and G×E interaction to variation in quality characteristics of hard red winter wheat, 18 winter wheat genotypes were grown in replicated trials at six locations in Nebraska and one site in Arizona in 1988 and 1989.
Journal ArticleDOI

QTL analysis of bread-making quality in wheat using a doubled haploid population

TL;DR: It appeared that except for the Glu-1A locus, storage protein loci were not clearly involved in the genetic control of the criteria studied in the present work, and despite the reasonable size of the population no QTL with interactive effects could be substantially established as measured.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selection response in subdivided target regions

TL;DR: A correlated response model was adapted to determine if division of a large target region is likely to increase gains, indicating that subdivision is unlikely to increase response, and helps explain the success of breeding programs that test broadly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genotypic and Environmental Modification of Wheat Flour Protein Composition in Relation to End-Use Quality

TL;DR: The proportion of glutenin was found to be significantly related to loaf grain properties, a parameter of critical concern to the milling and baking industry.
Related Papers (5)