Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease

Banana ranks among the four most important crops in the developing world. A significant proportion of world production is also imported and consumed in developed nations. Mycosphaerella leaf spot diseases caused by Mycosphaerella species are major threats to banana production. Breeding for resistanc...

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Main Authors: Vroh Bi, Irie, Zandjanakou-Tachin, Martine, Mbah, W., Tenkouano, A., Ojiambo, P., Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: International Society for Horticultural Science 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90231
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author Vroh Bi, Irie
Zandjanakou-Tachin, Martine
Mbah, W.
Tenkouano, A.
Ojiambo, P.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
author_browse Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Mbah, W.
Ojiambo, P.
Tenkouano, A.
Vroh Bi, Irie
Zandjanakou-Tachin, Martine
author_facet Vroh Bi, Irie
Zandjanakou-Tachin, Martine
Mbah, W.
Tenkouano, A.
Ojiambo, P.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
author_sort Vroh Bi, Irie
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Banana ranks among the four most important crops in the developing world. A significant proportion of world production is also imported and consumed in developed nations. Mycosphaerella leaf spot diseases caused by Mycosphaerella species are major threats to banana production. Breeding for resistance is the most sustainable approach to controlling Mycosphaerella leaf spot diseases for which an understanding of the genetics of plant resistance and the genetic diversity of the pathogen is required. The most common Mycosphaerella leaf spot disease in Nigeria is black leaf streak caused by M. fijiensis. A Nigerian isolate of M. fijiensis was used to assess the resistance of segregating populations of selfed Musa acuminata ssp. burmannicoides (‘Calcutta 4’) and also M. acuminata spp. burmannicoides ‘Calcutta 4’ × M. balbisiana ‘Montpellier’. The results showed that resistance is quantitative. Using Punnett squares, the resistance in wild diploid species and the variable levels of susceptibility in major triploid cultivars, including dessert banana (AAA), plantain (AAB) and cooking banana (ABB), was simulated and explained. Finally, investigations on the identity of the ancestral parents of the AAB-genome plantain cultivars, AAA-genome East African highland banana cultivars and ABB-genome cooking banana cultivars are proposed for better resistance breeding
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spelling CGSpace902312024-04-25T06:01:00Z Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease Vroh Bi, Irie Zandjanakou-Tachin, Martine Mbah, W. Tenkouano, A. Ojiambo, P. Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit banana and plantain black sigatoka wild species resistance breeding Banana ranks among the four most important crops in the developing world. A significant proportion of world production is also imported and consumed in developed nations. Mycosphaerella leaf spot diseases caused by Mycosphaerella species are major threats to banana production. Breeding for resistance is the most sustainable approach to controlling Mycosphaerella leaf spot diseases for which an understanding of the genetics of plant resistance and the genetic diversity of the pathogen is required. The most common Mycosphaerella leaf spot disease in Nigeria is black leaf streak caused by M. fijiensis. A Nigerian isolate of M. fijiensis was used to assess the resistance of segregating populations of selfed Musa acuminata ssp. burmannicoides (‘Calcutta 4’) and also M. acuminata spp. burmannicoides ‘Calcutta 4’ × M. balbisiana ‘Montpellier’. The results showed that resistance is quantitative. Using Punnett squares, the resistance in wild diploid species and the variable levels of susceptibility in major triploid cultivars, including dessert banana (AAA), plantain (AAB) and cooking banana (ABB), was simulated and explained. Finally, investigations on the identity of the ancestral parents of the AAB-genome plantain cultivars, AAA-genome East African highland banana cultivars and ABB-genome cooking banana cultivars are proposed for better resistance breeding 2009-05 2018-01-15T10:50:56Z 2018-01-15T10:50:56Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90231 en Limited Access International Society for Horticultural Science Vroh-Bi, I., Zandjanakou-Tachin, M., Mbah, W., Tenkouano, A., Ojiambo, P. & Bandyopadhyay, R. (2009). Resistance of f1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides calcutta 4 and m. balbisiana montpellier to black leaf streak disease. Acta Horticulturae,828, 353-357.
spellingShingle banana and plantain
black sigatoka
wild species
resistance breeding
Vroh Bi, Irie
Zandjanakou-Tachin, Martine
Mbah, W.
Tenkouano, A.
Ojiambo, P.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease
title Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease
title_full Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease
title_fullStr Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease
title_full_unstemmed Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease
title_short Resistance of F1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions Musa acuminata spp. burmannicoides Calcutta 4 and M. balbisiana Montpellier to black leaf streak disease
title_sort resistance of f1 segregating populations derived from crosses between wild banana accessions musa acuminata spp burmannicoides calcutta 4 and m balbisiana montpellier to black leaf streak disease
topic banana and plantain
black sigatoka
wild species
resistance breeding
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90231
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