Genetic Improvement of Alkalinity Tolerance in Rice in Office Du Niger in Mali
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University of Ghana
Abstract
Alkalinity stress is one of the most important abiotic stresses limiting rice production in irrigated
systems. Alkalinity stress during seedling stage widely affects irrigated rice production of Office
du Niger in Mali. The development of rice cultivars that tolerate alkalinity stress condition has
been hindered by the lack of an elaborate breeding program. The objectives of this study were:
(i) to evaluate and validate production constraints and varietal preferences of rice farmers in
alkalinized zones of Office du Niger; (ii) to identify alkaline tolerant accessions and their
association with SSR markers and, (iii) to characterize phenotypically F 2 progenies at seedling
stage in alkaline hydroponic solution.
Participatory rural appraisal was conducted in three (3) highly alkalinized zones of Office du
Niger. Two (2) villages per zone were involved in the study. Fertilizer cost, water management,
inadequate agricultural equipments and declining soil fertility were identified as the main
constraints of rice production. Overall, alkalinity was the most important abiotic stress affecting
rice production. Crop rotation; use of organic matters; ploughing followed by flooding and use of
tolerant varieties were the strategies developed by farmers to overcome alkalinity. Taste and
swelling for home consumption; grain color and size for marketing were farmers preferred traits.
Kogoni 91-1, BG 90-2 and Adny 11 were identified as farmer preferred varieties. Research
priorities important to the farmers, included: alkalinity tolerance at seedling and reproductive
stages combined; yield and taste and yield alone. Improvement of these characters in new
varieties with alkalinity tolerance would enhance productivity with likely positive impact on
small scale farmers’ food security, incomes and livelihoods. Farmers had high interest in
participatory varietal selection and participatory plant breeding.
The morphological and physiological analysis relationships between different rice accessions
revealed four accessions (Sahel 210, Damodar India (IRGC 17038), CSR 10 and CSR11) in the
same group of the tolerant check (Pokkali).
Genetic diversity and association of Simple Sequence Repeat (SSR) markers with alkalinity
tolerance were detected in a set of 26 rice genotypes. Among SSR markers used for morpho-
physiological characters, RM208 was significantly (P-value = 0.01) associated with the
potassium content in the flag leaves at 37% correlation coefficient. Phenotypic and genotypic
association studies identified the accessions Sahel 210, Damodar India (IRGC 17038), CSR 10
and CSR11 in the same clustering as Pokkali (salt tolerant check).
A protocol based on an alkaline hydroponic solution was validated and adopted. The pH 9.0 was
superior to separate alkaline tolerant and sensitive rice at early seedling stage. A total of 1,800
individual F 2 genotypes were screened and 1,652 were phenotyped in alkaline hydroponic
solution. The total number of surviving F 2 individuals at twenty five (25) days after
transplantation was 34 and varied from one cross combination to another.
Description
Thesis (PhD) - University of Ghana, 2013