Journal or Publishing Institution: Theoretical and Applied Genetics
Date of Publication: 12/01/1993
Study: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2FBF00215093
Author(s): Boudry, P., Mörchen, M., Saumitou-Laprade, P., Vernet, P., and Van Dijk, H.
Article Type: Peer Reviewed Study
Abstract: Populations of weed beets have expanded into European sugar beet production areas since the 1970s, thereby forming a serious new weed problem for this crop. We sampled seeds in different French populations and studied mitochondrial DNA, chloroplast DNA and life-cycle variability. Given the maternal inheritance of the mitochondrial and chloroplastic genomes and the nuclear determinism of the annual habit, we were able to determine the maternal origin and evolution of these weed beet populations. Our study shows that they carry the dominant allele “B” for annual habit at high frequency. The main cytoplasmic DNA type found in northern weed beet populations is the cytoplasmic male-sterile type characteristic of sugar beets. We were able to determine that these populations arise from seeds originating from the accidental pollinations of cultivated beets by adventitious beets in the seed production area, which have been transported to the regions where sugar beets are cultivated. These seeds are supposedly the origin of the weed forms and a frequently disturbed cultivated environment has selected for annual habit and early flowering genotypes. We discuss the consequences of the weed beet populations for the breeding, seed production and release of herbicide-resistant transgenic sugar beets.
Keywords: life cycle variability, cytoplasmic DNA markers, Beta vulgaris L., weeds, GM sugar beet, herbicide resistant transgenic sugar beet
Citation:
Boudry, P., Mörchen, M., Saumitou-Laprade, P., Vernet, P., and Van Dijk, H., 1993. The origin and evolution of weed beets: consequences for the breeding and release of herbicide-resistant transgenic sugar beets. Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 87(4), 471-478.
Category:
- Environmental effects
- Pesticide use
Record ID: 244