|
The search for Asian rust resistance
Grover Shannon believes he has a jump on producing soybean
varieties resistant to Asian soybean rust. The University of Missouri soybean
breeder plans to crossbreed new varieties this summer, based on what he learned
during an 18-day trip to Vietnam.
"We may have material, at least based on initial screening,
that looks pretty good," Shannon said after seeing his 50 top varieties growing
in rust-infected soybean fields in Southeast Asia.
Shannon, stationed at the MU Delta Center in Portageville,
and David Sleper, soybean breeder in Columbia, Mo., sent soybean seeds to be
planted in Vietnam last February. After their trip to Vietnam in May, they came
home optimistic about the possibility of finding rust-resistant genes in MU
varieties.
"It's all very preliminary," Shannon said. "We'll learn more
during the season."
Compared to susceptible Vietnamese varieties, the Missouri
beans "looked pretty decent," Shannon said. That leads him to hope that his
soybeans already have resistance, or at least tolerance, to the fungus.
Shannon is not waiting for confirmation. He is already
planning crosses, examining the pedigrees of the varieties that looked the best
in Vietnam. "We'll go back to the parent lines and start making crosses,"
Shannon said.
Soybean varieties grown in the United States came from seed
originally brought from the Far East. It is likely that some varieties have
been carrying rust resistance all these years, but they have never needed the
rust resistance until now.
The spores of the fungus cannot survive in freezing zones,
but the disease was found overwintering on kudzu in Florida.
MU researchers reacted quickly, Shannon said. "Rust was
found in November, and we had our varieties planted in Vietnam by February."
Shannon gives full credit for the quick response to Henry
Nguyen, a native of Vietnam and head of the National Center for Soybean
Biotechnology on the MU campus in Columbia. "Henry knew the scientists at the
research centers there," Shannon said. "I don't know of any other state that
has that kind of connection."
Nguyen had already received soybean seed from Vietnam for
his work in mapping soybean genes. At that time, rust resistance was not a
great concern in the United States.
The recent visit opened the door to receiving more seed from
resistant Vietnamese varieties. "They've had rust for a long time," Shannon
said. "They live with rust, just like we've been living with soybean cyst
nematodes. There, rust is everywhere."
If rust resistance is already in varieties adapted to
Missouri, rapid progress can be made, Shannon said. "If we have to use
resistance from Vietnamese varieties not adapted to our conditions, it will
take a little longer.
"Varieties that yield well will be the first consideration
in any breeding program," Shannon said. "If they don't yield, our growers won't
plant them."
Seed from new crosses made this summer will be sent to
Vietnam for testing in rust-infected fields. "If we don't have rust in our
plots, we're not going to introduce rust just to test our crosses," Shannon
said. "Our farmers wouldn't stand for that."
|