Viability of Deficit Irrigation Pre-Exposure in Adapting Robusta Coffee to Drought Stress
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Agronomy
Abstract
Coffea canephora has high but inadequately exploited genetic diversity. This diversity, if
well exploited, can sustain coffee productivity amidst climate change effects. Drought and heat
stress are major global threats to coffee productivity, quality, and tradable volumes. It is not well
understood if there is a selectable variation for drought stress tolerance in Robusta coffee half-sibs
as a result of watering deficit pre-exposure at the germination stage. Half-sib seeds from selected
commercial clones (KR5, KR6, KR7) and a pipeline clone X1 were primed with deficit watering at
two growth stages followed by recovery and later evaluated for tolerance to watering deficit stress in
three different temperature environments by estimation of plant growth and wilt parameters. Overall,
the KR7 family performed the best in terms of the number of individuals excelling for tolerance to
deficit watering. In order of decreasing tolerance, the 10 most promising individuals for drought and
heat tolerance were identified as: 14.KR7.2, 25.X1.1, 35.KR5.5, 36.KR5.6, 41.KR7.5, 46.KR6.4, 47.KR6.5,
291.X1.3, 318.X1.3, and 15.KR7.3. This is the first prospect into the potential of C. canephora half-sibs’
diversity as an unbound source of genetic variation for abiotic stress tolerance breeding.
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Research Article