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1.
Pest Manag Sci ; 79(2): 870-880, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36308725

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Weedy rice is one of the main agricultural weeds infesting transplanted and direct-seeded rice cultures across Japan. However, the environmental factors that facilitate its proliferation are largely unknown. This study investigated the effects of temperature and water availability on seed germination of Japanese weedy and cultivated rice strains differing in degree of seed dormancy and after-ripening. This information could help predict weedy rice infestation and design efficacious control measures. RESULTS: The germination responses of weedy rice to temperature and water availability varied among strains and after-ripening duration. The germination rate varied inversely with the degree of dormancy, increased with water availability, and fluctuated between low and high temperatures. The shallow-dormant tropical japonica-derived strawhull weedy rice (TRJ) germinated at 10 °C unlike the temperate japonica-derived weedy rice strains, namely, the intermediate-dormant blackhull (BH) and the deep-dormant strawhull (SH). Seeds of all plant strains germinated below the permanent wilting point of clay loam soil, but the germination rates were higher for TRJ and BH than for cultivated rice. SH germination was more synchronous with rice than the other weedy rice strains. CONCLUSION: This study has confirmed the overall robustness of germination cold tolerance at 10 °C in TRJ, high germinability at low-water availability and high temperature in TRJ and BH, and relatively more synchronous germination between SH and cultivated rice in seeds grown in different years. These observed characteristics are considered advantageous to the coexistence of weedy rice with cultivated rice. © 2022 Society of Chemical Industry.


Subject(s)
Germination , Oryza , Temperature , Oryza/physiology , Seeds/physiology , Plant Weeds , Plant Dormancy
2.
Mol Ecol ; 31(24): 6556-6569, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36178060

ABSTRACT

Plant hybridization is a pathway for the evolution of adaptive traits. However, hybridization between adapted and nonadapted populations may affect the persistence of combinations of adaptive alleles evolved through natural selection. Seed dormancy is an adaptive trait for weedy rice because it regulates the timing of seed germination and the persistence of the soil seed bank. Hybridization between weedy and cultivated rice has been confirmed with an adaptive introgression of deep seed dormancy alleles from cultivated rice. Here, we explored the influence of hybridization on the conservation of adaptive allele combinations by evaluating natural variation and genetic structure in seed dormancy-associated genomic regions. Based on sequence variation in the genomic regions associated with seed dormancy, hybrid-derived weedy rice strains maintained most of the adaptive combinations for this trait observed in the parental weedy rice, despite equal representation of the parental weedy and cultivated rice in the whole genome sequence. Moreover, hybrid-derived weedy rice strains were more dormant than their parental weedy rice strains, and this trait was strongly influenced by the environment. This study suggests that hybridization between weedy rice (adaptive allelic combinations for seed dormancy) and cultivated rice (nonadaptive combinations) generates weedy rice strains expressing deep seed dormancy caused by genome stabilization through the removal of alleles derived from cultivated rice, in addition to the adaptive introgression of deep seed dormancy alleles derived from cultivated rice. Thus, hybridization between adapted and nonadapted populations appears to be reinforcing the trajectory towards the evolution of adaptive traits.


Subject(s)
Oryza , Oryza/genetics , Alleles , Plant Dormancy/genetics , Genetic Variation/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Plant Weeds/genetics
3.
Front Plant Sci ; 12: 748531, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34899776

ABSTRACT

To maximize crop growth, crops need to capture sunlight efficiently. This property is primarily influenced by the shape of the crops such as the angle, area, and arrangement of leaves. We constructed a rice (Oryza sativa L.) inbred line that displayed an ideal transition of plant shapes in terms of sunlight receiving efficiency. During vegetative growth, this line exhibited tiller spreading with increased tiller number, which formed a parabolic antenna-like structure. The architecture probably improved light reception efficiency of individuals compared with the recurrent parent. The line achieved not only acceleration of the vegetative growth, but also significant suppression of weed growth under the canopy. The increased light reception efficiency of the line has consequently reduced the amount of incident light to the ground and supplied significant competitiveness against weeds. The spread tillers became erect from the entry of the reproductive growth phase, adaptively sustaining light reception efficiency in thicker stands. The line carries a small chromosomal segment from Oryza rufipogon Griff., a putative progenitor of Asian cultivated rice. The introduced chromosome segment had little effect on grain yield and quality. Our results shed light on potentials hidden in the wild rice chromosome segment to achieve the valuable traits.

4.
Commun Biol ; 4(1): 952, 2021 08 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34376793

ABSTRACT

Agricultural weeds are the most important biotic constraints to global crop production, and chief among these is weedy rice. Despite increasing yield losses from weedy rice in recent years worldwide, the genetic basis of weediness evolution remains unclear. Using whole-genome sequence analyses, we examined the origins and adaptation of Japanese weedy rice. We find evidence for a weed origin from tropical japonica crop ancestry, which has not previously been documented in surveys of weedy rice worldwide. We further show that adaptation occurs largely through different genetic mechanisms between independently-evolved temperate japonica- and tropical japonica-derived strains; most genomic signatures of positive selection are unique within weed types. In addition, some weedy rice strains have evolved through hybridization between weedy and cultivated rice with adaptive introgression from the crop. Surprisingly, introgression from cultivated rice confers not only crop-like adaptive traits (such as shorter plant height, facilitating crop mimicry) but also weedy-like traits (such as seed dormancy). These findings reveal how hybridization with cultivated rice can promote persistence and proliferation of weedy rice.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Domestication , Evolution, Molecular , Genome, Plant , Oryza/genetics , Plant Weeds/genetics , Hybridization, Genetic
5.
Genome Biol ; 21(1): 70, 2020 03 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32213201

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Worldwide feralization of crop species into agricultural weeds threatens global food security. Weedy rice is a feral form of rice that infests paddies worldwide and aggressively outcompetes cultivated varieties. Despite increasing attention in recent years, a comprehensive understanding of the origins of weedy crop relatives and how a universal feralization process acts at the genomic and molecular level to allow the rapid adaptation to weediness are still yet to be explored. RESULTS: We use whole-genome sequencing to examine the origin and adaptation of 524 global weedy rice samples representing all major regions of rice cultivation. Weed populations have evolved multiple times from cultivated rice, and a strikingly high proportion of contemporary Asian weed strains can be traced to a few Green Revolution cultivars that were widely grown in the late twentieth century. Latin American weedy rice stands out in having originated through extensive hybridization. Selection scans indicate that most genomic regions underlying weedy adaptations do not overlap with domestication targets of selection, suggesting that feralization occurs largely through changes at loci unrelated to domestication. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first investigation to provide detailed genomic characterizations of weedy rice on a global scale, and the results reveal diverse genetic mechanisms underlying worldwide convergent rice feralization.


Subject(s)
Oryza/genetics , Asia , Chimera , Evolution, Molecular , Genomics , Latin America
6.
Am J Bot ; 104(4): 516-526, 2017 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28411210

ABSTRACT

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Plants adjust their phenology in response to seasonal cues experienced both by their parents and by themselves, and coordinating responses to these cues is necessary for expressing adaptive phenology. We investigated how cues are integrated across time to influence an important progeny phenotype, i.e., seed germination. METHODS: We used Arabidopsis thaliana to investigate how the photoperiod experienced by maternal parents and by progeny influences seed germination. We examined when maternal photoperiod effects on germination are imposed and how long they persist in progeny. KEY RESULTS: The photoperiod experienced by maternal plants more strongly influenced germination than the photoperiod experienced during seed imbibition. In addition, the photoperiod experienced at the prereproductive stage frequently influenced germination as strongly as that experienced during reproduction. In general, seeds from plants grown under short days had higher seed germination percentages than seeds from plants grown in longer days. These maternal effects diminished with after-ripening, but reappeared in seeds induced into secondary dormancy. CONCLUSIONS: We found no evidence that the effect of photoperiod systematically attenuates in proportion to the time that elapsed between the cue and the timing of seed germination. Moreover, more recently experienced cues did not override the effects of cues experienced previously. Instead, specific sequences of photoperiods experienced at the prereproductive and reproductive stages appear to influence germination behavior.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/physiology , Germination/physiology , Photoperiod , Seeds/growth & development , Arabidopsis/radiation effects , Germination/radiation effects , Plant Dormancy/physiology , Plant Dormancy/radiation effects , Reproduction/physiology , Reproduction/radiation effects , Seeds/physiology
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