Agronomy (Dec 2020)

EarlySeason Morphological and Physiological Responses of Resistant and Susceptible Cotton Genotypes to Reniform Nematode and Soil Nitrogen

  • Bhupinder Singh,
  • Daryl R. Chastain,
  • Kambham Raja Reddy,
  • John L. Snider,
  • L. Jason Krutz,
  • Salliana R. Stetina,
  • Akanksha Sehgal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy10121974
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 1974

Abstract

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Soil fertility and reniform nematode (RN) directly affect earlyseason growth and physiology of cotton. The growth responses to soil fertility and RN may, however, vary across germplasm. A greenhouse study was conducted to gain information on the role that host plant resistance plays in influencing RN populations, and cotton growth and physiological response to a range of soil nitrogen (N) levels in the presence and absence of RN. RN-resistant cotton lines (08SS110-NE06.OP and 08SS100) along with susceptible cultivars (Deltapine 16 and PHY 490 W3FE) were subjected to four levels of N from planting until biomass harvesting, 60 days after planting(DAP), under the presence orabsence of RN. The linear and quadratic functions (r2 = 0.72 to 0.99) bestdescribed measured responses of cotton genotypes to soil N. However, the responses were not different among genotypes, except for plant height at 30 DAP. This study revealed significant increases in several morphological parameters with increasing rates of N. RN population in the pots grown with resistant lines was lower whencompared to susceptible cultivars at biomassharvest. Physiological responses indicated that 08SS110-NE06.OP was more resilient to RN stress than other genotypes. The information from this study could be useful in managing the early season growth of cotton.

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