See more from this Division:
C03 Crop Ecology, Management & Quality
See more from this Session:
Corn and Soybean Management
Monday, November 1, 2010
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Lower Level
Pamela Rzodkiewicz, Timothy Todd, Chris Little and William Schapaugh, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS
The soybean cyst nematode (Heterodera glycines)
(SCN) is an important pathogen of soybean in the United States. Annual yield losses
from SCN are estimated to be over $2 billion worldwide. SCN virulence or the ability of a nematode to grow on resistant
soybean covers a wide range of phenotypic and genotypic diversity. Fortunately
there are several genetic sources of resistance to decrease the virulence of
the pathogen on the soybean. The objectives of this research was to: 1)
characterize the genetic diversity of soybean cyst nematode populations in
Kansas, 2) determine the frequency of Kansas SCN populations virulent on
PI88788, 3) determine which plant introductions used in the HG Type Test
provide the best level resistance, and 4) compare the performance of commercial
soybean varieties to the plant introduction from which their SCN resistance is
derived. Soil samples were collected
from SCN-infested fields across the state. Five gallons of soil were collected
from Kansas
fields that were known to have had SCN present. Each soil sample was taken to
the greenhouse and planted to a susceptible soybean cultivar to increase SCN
population. Following an SCN population increase, a HG Type Test was planted. H. glycines
field populations were highly variable, not only in population densities, but
also in their abilities to develop on soybean genotypes. Collected from a
diverse range of environments, sixteen HG types were identified. About 50% of
the H. glycines
populations were virulent on PI 88788, and most of the populations were
virulent on commercial SCN resistant lines which derived their resistance from
PI 88788. The commercial lines tended to be more susceptible to SCN than the
lines from which they derived their resistance, but few HG populations were
virulent on PI 437654 or the commercial line that derived its resistance from
PI 437654. These results suggest that
sources other than PI 88788 should be used in the development of H. glycines
resistant cultivars for Kansas.
On possible source of resistance is PI 437654. Information about SCN diversity
in Kansas
will improve decisions regarding cultivar development and selection for SCN
management.