Home
|
Press
|
Events
|
Eshare
Sign in
/
Register
0
Shopping Cart
X
Close
My Products (0 items)
My shopping cart is empty.
.
Sign in
/
Register
X
Close
Login/Register
Email
Password
INDUSTRIES
Agriculture
Chemicals
Food & Feed
Pesticides
Titanium Dioxide (TiO2)
Dairy Products
Full Industry List
ONLINE DATABASE
PRICE FORECAST
PRODUCTS & SERVICE
Products' Introduction
Industrial Reports
Newsletters
Market Data
Content Byte
Agrochemical Regulatory
Customized solutions
IMPACT FACTOR
MARKET NEWS
Agriculture
Chemicals
Food & Feed
Other
ABOUT
About CCM
Why CCM?
CCM Story
CCM Clients
Events
Career
Company news
CONTACT
Home
Product
Complimentary download
Researchers zeroing in on flood-tolerant varieties
Recommend Report
Need some help to find your information ?
E-mail:
econtact@cnchemicals.com
Tel: +86-20-37616606
Search Report
Agriculture
Biotechnology
Chemicals
Economics and investment and financial
Energy and utilities
Food and Feed
Food and Feed (Ingredients)
Minerals/resources/mining
Pharmaceuticals and healthcare
Printing & packaging
More Reports >>
Recommend Newsletter
Related market data
Related product
Related research
Researchers zeroing in on flood-tolerant varieties
Keyword:
Publish time:
23
rd
June, 2015
Source:
USA
Information collection and data processing: CCM For more information, please
contact us
Researchers zeroing in on flood-tolerant varietiesResearchers zeroing in on flood-tolerant varieties" title="Share this link on Facebook">USAJune 8, 2015It’s no secret that soybeans don’t often perform well in wet soil. Plants with “wet feet” for extended periods of time will turn yellow, suffer from reduced
nitrogen
fixation and rarely recover enough to reach full yield potential. With support from the soy checkoff, researchers at the University of Missouri (MU) Fisher Delta Research Center in southeast Missouri are getting closer to releasing varieties bred with increased flood tolerance.MU
soybean
breeder Grover Shannon, Ph.D., says there are about 8 million acres in the Mississippi River Delta area alone with soybeans growing in slowly-drained soils. The soils are heavy and many fields have nearly zero grade.A lot of farmers in the region irrigate, so drought can be taken out of the equation, but there’s not much farmers can do when there’s too much water.Shannon says the germplasm base for flood tolerance is quite narrow. Working with about 19,000 specimens from around the world, MU researchers have found and mapped genes for flood tolerance. Many of the most promising flood-tolerant varieties also showed resistance to Phytophthora, so it appears that resistance could be a key to breeding varieties with superior flood tolerance.“We won’t get varieties that live in water, but we can develop ones that give farmers confidence that they won’t lose all their yield,” Shannon contends.Shannon says under flood conditions, several progeny of the test lines yielded three times as much as the varieties currently available. While that’s encouraging, he says they’re still a year or more away from releasing a variety because the yield still isn’t where it needs to be.“We can get tolerance, now we need the yield,” Shannon adds. “A farmer needs to be confident that what he plants is going to yield no matter where he puts it.”More news from:. United Soybean Board (USB). University of MissouriWebsite: http://www.cnchemicals.com/: June 23, 2015The news item on this page is copyright by the organization where it originatedFair use notice
Index Type:(required)
-- Please select --
Message:(required)
Name:(required)
Email:(required)
Tel:
Message:(required)
Name:(required)
Email:(required)
Tel: