Title: Experience Using GEM Germplasm in a Public Breeding Program
1Experience Using GEM Germplasm in a Public
Breeding Program
- Jim Hawk, Tecle Weldekidan, and Travis Frey
- Department of Plant and Soil Sciences
2GEM Objectives
- To improve and broaden the germplasm base
- Traits targeted are agronomic productivity,
disease and insect resistance, and value-added - The ultimate target is to release lines for
applied and basic research
3Topics for Discussion
- Choice of parental germplasm
- Breeding methods/strategies
- Hybrid evaluation
- Opportunities/challenges
- Summary
4Choice of Parental Germplasm
5Choice of Parental Germplasm
- Breeding crosses- accession x elite inbred line
- Elite inbred lines- all lines not more than one
breeding cycle removed from a commercial product - Over 550 breeding crosses which ones should
receive priority for pre-breeding? - Other accessions ?
6Breeding Cross Evaluations
- Locations
- USDA GEM, Ames Mike Blanco
- Golden Harvest, IL Kevin Montgomery
- University of Delaware, Newark, DE
- No. of Breeding Crosses Evaluated
- 2003 168
- 2004 173
7Traits Evaluated in Breeding Crosses
- Adaptability
- Days to flowering
- Ear and plant height
- Ear traits
- Disease and insect resistance
- Root and stalk lodging
- Stay green
- Plant appearance
8Recommended GEM Breeding Populations Evaluated at
Three Locations, 2003
9Breeding Crosses Utilized at the University of
Delaware
- 10/year
- Most 75 corn belt, some 50
- Grow 1200 plants/population
- Self 400-600 plants/population
10Breeding Methodology
- Pedigree
- Mass selection for more heritable traits
- - plant and ear height
- - maturity
- - ear traits
- - disease and insect resistance
- - root and stalk strength
- Balance offensive and defensive traits
11Number of S1 Ears Selected from GEM Breeding
Crosses
12Breeding Methodology
- Select 0-160 S1 ears/breeding cross
- S1 families
- ? 6-8/family
- Family and mass selection for more
heritable traits - Sampling within best S1 families 1-3
S2 ears - Goal 50 S2 ears minimum from better
populations - Discard poor breeding crosses
13Number of SS S2 Lines Selected from GEM S1
Families
14Number of Non-SS S2 Lines Selected from GEM S1
Families
15Hybrid Evaluation
- 50 S2 testcrosses 3 commercial checks
- Use testers with good GCA and agronomics (roots,
stalks, disease and insect resistance) - Locations/reps 3 DE (1 dryland, 2 irrigated)
with 2 reps/location, USDA-GEM Ames-1 rep - Second year YT- 2 testers x 8 locations
16 DK212TN11a10 Lines Crossed to Pioneer SS Tester
17CUBA164 Lines Crossed to LH185
18Opportunities/Challenges
- Trait improvement using selected GEM lines -
Grain quality, disease, insect resistance, etc. - Use additional testers
-
19Opportunities/Challenges
- Sister line mapping studies
- DKXL212N11a-365-1-1-2-1-1(DE4)
- DKXL212N11a-365-1-1-1-1
- Recycling
- - Further improvements needed for
commercialization -
20 DE4 Recycled Lines Crossed to LH244
21Summary
- Focus on adaptability, agronomics, disease/insect
resistance first - - Breeding cross evaluations
- - Family and mass selection for
more heritable traits - May be useful to re-evaluate better breeding
crosses in additional years
22Summary
- Germplasm for new breeding crosses - Lines,
improved populations etc. - Useful genetic variation within adapted GEM
families
23Summary
- Practice art of plant breeding
- Better to discard earlier than later
- Focus on better germplasm
- Plant breeders
- Short-term pessimists
- and
- Long-term optimists
24Acknowledgements
- Wilfredo Salhuana
- USDA-GEM, Ames
- Holdens Foundation Seeds
- Mycogen Seeds
- Pioneer Hi-Bred Int.