Understanding Our Environment
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Transcript Understanding Our Environment
Plant Breeding and Propagation
Chapter 14
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Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Outline
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Crop Plant Evolution
Plant Breeding
Sexually Compatible Germplasm
Sexually Incompatible Germplasm
- Bacterial Gene Cloning
Transgenic Plants
Seed Propagation
Asexual Plant Propagation
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Crop Plant Evolution
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Approximately 200,000 species of flowering
plants.
Six species provide 80% of calories
consumed by humans worldwide.
- Wheat, Rice, Corn, Potato, Sweet Potato,
and Cassava.
Eight additional plants complete the list of
major crops grown for human consumption.
- Sugar Cane, Sugar Beet, Bean, Soybean,
Barley, Sorghum, Coconut, and Banana.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Origins of Agriculture
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First plants were domesticated in the Near
East around 10,000 years ago.
Root crops and legumes were
domesticated 2,000-3,000 years ago.
- Plants for forage, decoration, and drugs
were first domesticated about 2,000
years ago.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Regions of Domestication
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Plant Breeding
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Plant breeding is accelerated evolution
guided by humans rather than nature.
Breeders replace natural selection with
human selection to modify plant genetics.
- Primary goal of plant-breeding programs
is commonly improved yield.
Disease resistance, pest resistance,
and stress tolerance contribute to
yield.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Plant Breeding
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Strategies
Self-Pollination - Plants are capable of
fertilizing themselves.
- Tend to be highly homologous.
Significant inbreeding
Wheat, Rice, Peas, Tomatoes
- Pure-Line Selection - Collecting seeds
from several plants, growing seeds from
an individual plant in a row, and then
selecting the most desirable row.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Plant Breeding
Cross-Pollination - Plants must be fertilized
from other individuals.
- Tend to be highly heterozygous.
Corn, Rye, Alfalfa and most Fruit.
- Mass Selection - Many plants from a
population are selected, and seeds from
these plants are then used to create the
next generation.
Seeds from the best are used to
create the next generation.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
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Plant Breeding Using
Sexually Compatible Germplasm
Outcrossing in cross-pollinated crops often
results in hybrid vigor (heterosis).
Cross-pollinated plants tend to exhibit
inbreeding depression.
Modern breeders cross pollinate to delete
deleterious alleles.
- Heirloom Varieties are grown as openpollinated populations.
Genetic variability allows crop
production under different
environmental conditions.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Germplasm Collection and Gene Banks
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A plant’s germplasm is the sum total of its
genes.
Current agricultural varieties are often
genetically uniform, and thus may not be
good sources of genetic variability.
Gene Banks have been established to
meet current and future demands of plant
genetic diversity.
- Seeds or other propagules are put into
long-term storage.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
•
Plant Breeding Using
Sexually Incompatible Germplasm
Protoplast Fusion
Cells of each species are grown in a liquid
nutrient solution.
- Cell walls are chemically stripped to
produce protoplasts.
Protoplasts of two species are mixed
together and stimulated with the aid of
an electric current or chemical
solution, to fuse with each other.
Few successes
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Plant Breeding Using
Sexually Incompatible Germplasm
•
Gene Splicing and Transgenic Plants
Transgenic Plants are produced by
inserting genes from one plant into
another.
- Recombinant DNA
Restriction Enzymes cut DNA into
fragments with sticky ends.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Plant Breeding Using
Sexually Incompatible Germplasm
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Plasmids are commonly used as cloning
vectors.
Small circular bacterial DNA.
After cloning, the gene is inserted into plant
cells via transformation.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens
Particle Guns
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Bacterial Gene Cloning
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Bacterial Gene Cloning
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Making A Transgenic Plant
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Transgenic Plants
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Pros
Transgenic crops are often environmentally
friendly.
- Farmers can use fewer pesticides.
Cons
Effect on non-target organisms, such as
insects, in the food web.
Movement of herbicide resistance to weeds.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Seed Propagation
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Hybrid varieties are often grown from seed
produced by crosses between two inbred
parents.
Inbred line varieties are typically grown
from seed and allowed to self-pollinate.
Mature seeds are harvested and stored in a
controlled environment.
Viability is best when seeds are maintained
in cool, dry storage.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Seed Propagation
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In preparation for planting, seeds may be
dusted with a protectant, such as a fungicide.
Seeds must be planted in a suitable bed.
Moist soil to allow seeds to imbibe water.
- Dry enough to maintain suitable oxygen
levels.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Asexual Plant Propagation
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Cuttings
Produce adventitious roots.
- Cells near the wound must dedifferentiate
and create a new meristematic region.
Layering
Tip Layering - Bend tips until they touch the
ground, and then cover them with soil.
Air Layering - Wounding or Girdling to
produce roots.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Cuttings and Air Layering
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Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Asexual Plant Propagation
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Grafting
Segments of different plants are connected
and induced to grow together as one plant.
- Scion - Top section of a graft.
- Rootstock - Bottom section of a graft.
Successful grafting depends on good
contact between the vascular cambium
of the scion and that of the rootstock.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Asexual Plant Propagation
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Micropropagation
Grow and maintain plants in a disease-free
status in test tubes.
- Grown in-vitro in sterile medium.
- Relies on totipotency of plant cells.
Capacity of a cell to give rise to any
structure of a mature organism.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Asexual Plant Propagation
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Micropropagation usually begins with the
establishment of an explant in tissue culture.
Plant parts are disinfested.
Induced to develop multiple shoots.
Microshoots separated and placed in a new
medium by subculturing.
Root Formation
Transfer plants back to outdoor
environment.
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Review
•
•
Crop Plant Evolution
Plant Breeding
Sexually Compatible Germplasm
Sexually Incompatible Germplasm
- Bacterial Gene Cloning
Transgenic Plants
Seed Propagation
Asexual Plant Propagation
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies
Copyright © McGraw-Hill Companies Permission Required for Reproduction or Display
Stern - Introductory Plant Biology: 9th Ed. - All Rights Reserved - McGraw Hill Companies