Farm Progress

Texas AgriLife vegetable breeding goal is to directly benefit the Texas vegetable industry, especially producers in South, Southwest and Central Texas.

Paul Schattenberg

March 28, 2017

4 Min Read
An onion field planted at the Uvalde center for helping determine the best cultivars for the area.Texas A&M AgriLife photo by Paul Schattenberg

A unique vegetable breeding program at the Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension Center in Uvalde could bring improved onion, watermelon, tomato and black-eyed pea varieties to producers in South and Central Texas.

“The uniqueness of this multidisciplinary breeding program, involving breeders, physiologists, pathologists and entomologists, is the screening and development of new germplasm and ultimately improved varieties are conducted in real-life environmental conditions,” said Dr. Daniel Leskovar, center director and vegetable physiologist. “This will ensure the cultivars we breed are highly adaptable, as well as have abiotic and biotic stress tolerance and provide high yield and quality.

Leskovar said the ultimate goal is to directly benefit the Texas vegetable industry, especially producers in South, Southwest and Central Texas.

“The vegetable breeding program at Uvalde emphasizes breeding for host resistance for biotic stresses such as insects and diseases,” said Dr. Subas Malla, Texas A&M AgriLife Research vegetable breeder at the center. “The program also examines the interaction of host resistance and management practices to reduce insects and diseases in various crops.”

CLIMATE CHANGE EFFECT

Malla said the predicted rise in global warming will bring increased heat and drought stress conditions to the Texas Winter Garden area, where the center is located, as well as agricultural areas further south.

Related:Texas AgriLife extends commitment to vegetable research

“Our program will develop new cultivars to adapt to these stress conditions,” he said. “Our breeding program will also develop mapping populations to identify diagnostic markers for quantitative trait loci for biotic and abiotic stress tolerance.”

He said the mapping to identify biotic and abiotic stress-tolerance markers will be used in the onion-breeding program via marker-assisted selection.

“Onion takes two years to complete a crossing cycle and consequently takes longer for cultivar development,” Malla explained. “By reducing the number of years to develop a cultivar, we can substantially increase the genetic gain per year in our breeding. We plan on using the doubled-haploid technique, which allows for faster generation of inbred lines for hybrid cultivar and open pollination cultivar development.”

Malla said the breeding program will also employ genomic selection, a breeding tool in which molecular markers are fit into a model to predict breeding values.

DECREASED BREEDING INTERVAL

“The expectation is the genomic prediction model will increase genetic gains and decrease the breeding cycle time,” he explained. “Markers across the whole genome will be used to select for lines as parents, to make crossing decisions, to enrich populations and to select for lines for cultivar development.”

Malla said addressing pest and disease resistance will be especially important in developing improved onion and tomato cultivars. Pests such as thrips can have a devastating economic impact on onion crops, and thrips and whitefly can cause substantial tomato crop losses. Additionally, diseases like iris yellow spot virus in onions and tomato yellow leaf curl virus in tomatoes can significantly affect quality and yield.

He said the center will collaborate with other Texas A&M AgriLife facilities to evaluate the interaction of biotic and abiotic stresses on yield and quality.

“The program will evaluate Texas A&M onion and tomato germplasm for resistance or tolerance to these pests and diseases,” he said. “In onion, germplasm will also be assessed for pink root resistance.”

He said watermelon germplasm and advanced lines will be screened for anthracnose resistance in the greenhouse at Uvalde to identify their respective levels of resistance. In addition, mapping populations of watermelon germplasm from the University of Georgia will be evaluated for anthracnose resistance.

Anthracnose is a fungal disease of plants causing round dead spots or lesions on leaves or fruit.

 “Diagnostic molecular markers for each anthracnose resistant gene will be identified and utilized via marker-assisted selection in the Texas watermelon breeding program,” he said.

Malla said the breeding program is also interested in promoting the planting of cowpeas – black-eyed peas – as a summer crop for Central and South Texas producers.

“Due to the short period from sowing to harvest, the cowpea fits well into the Texas cropping system,” he said. “It’s a 60-day crop that grows well in a hot, dry climate and also serves as a good crop for helping reintroduce nitrogen into the soil.”

For the cowpea program, Malla said he will be collaborating with Dr. Dirk Hays in the soil and crop sciences department of Texas A&M’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and Dr. B.B. Singh of AgriLife Research, both in College Station, to identify heat and drought-tolerance markers.

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