2012
DOI: 10.1590/s0006-87052012005000037
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Interaction genotype by season and its influence on the identification of beans with high content of zinc and iron

Abstract: The mineral contents in common bean seeds are influenced, in addition to genetic variation, by environmental crop conditions, especially by the soil type and chemical composition and by the genotype x environment interaction. This study was carried out to verify if the zinc and iron contents are affected by the crop growing period. Ten lines with high iron and zinc contents and ten with low contents were assessed in three seasons: "wet season" of 2009/2010 (sowing in November); "dry season" of 2010 (sowing in … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…The major effect of excess of moisture on plants is the alteration of the hormonal balance and dry matter concentration and inhibition of photosynthesis and micronutrient uptake (Nunez-Elisea et al, 1999;Pezeshki, 2001;Dat et al, 2004;Kreuzwieser et al, 2004) confirming the decrease of our four genotypes of the micronutrient content of Iron upstream [CODMLB001 (81 > < 40.5 mg/g); RWR2245 (52 > < 42.5 mg/g); HM21-7 (62 > < 40.7 mg/g) and RWK10 (55 > < 37.9 mg/g)] and of Zinc content downstream [CODMLB001 (34 > < 13 mg/g); RWR2245 (34 > < 16 mg/g); HM21-7 (33 > < 18 mg/g) and RWK10 (35 > < 11 mg/g)] during the two experimental seasons. Besides, it confirms the results of Pfeiffer and McClafferty's (2007) work, as well as that of Silva et al (2012) attesting that biofortified bean's contents in Iron and Zinc is not only genotypical, but like any quantitative character, it is also influenced by environmental factors (agronomic, climatic and edaphic) and G×E interactions such as differential genotype responses to agronomic, climatic and edaphic factors.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…The major effect of excess of moisture on plants is the alteration of the hormonal balance and dry matter concentration and inhibition of photosynthesis and micronutrient uptake (Nunez-Elisea et al, 1999;Pezeshki, 2001;Dat et al, 2004;Kreuzwieser et al, 2004) confirming the decrease of our four genotypes of the micronutrient content of Iron upstream [CODMLB001 (81 > < 40.5 mg/g); RWR2245 (52 > < 42.5 mg/g); HM21-7 (62 > < 40.7 mg/g) and RWK10 (55 > < 37.9 mg/g)] and of Zinc content downstream [CODMLB001 (34 > < 13 mg/g); RWR2245 (34 > < 16 mg/g); HM21-7 (33 > < 18 mg/g) and RWK10 (35 > < 11 mg/g)] during the two experimental seasons. Besides, it confirms the results of Pfeiffer and McClafferty's (2007) work, as well as that of Silva et al (2012) attesting that biofortified bean's contents in Iron and Zinc is not only genotypical, but like any quantitative character, it is also influenced by environmental factors (agronomic, climatic and edaphic) and G×E interactions such as differential genotype responses to agronomic, climatic and edaphic factors.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) is one of the oldest world cultures preferentially consumed in the human diet due to its gastronomic (Broughton et al, 2002;Beebe, 2010;Silva et al, 2012;Casinga et al, 2016aCasinga et al, , 2016b, culinary (Dinste, 2012;Garden-Robinson & McNeal, 2013) and socio-cultural (Dinste, 2012) specificities. Although faced with several environmental constraints throughout its vital life cycle, it is cultivated in more than 20 countries in Southern, Central and Eastern Africa owing to its adaptability to several ecological niches and so occupies more than four million hectares (Broughton et al, 2002;Hacisalihoglu et al, 2005;Yasar et al, 2008;Casinga et al, 2016a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This can be attributed to the lower average minimum and maximum temperatures and the lower amount of precipitation during the pod-filling to maturity stages of the plants in the dry season, resulting in a lower accumulation of iron in the seeds. Lower translocation of iron to common bean seeds was also reported by Silva et al (2012) in bean lines grown in the dry season, with sowing in February, in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil, when rainfall rates were low.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…For the iron concentration in seeds, the P 1 × P 2 contrast was not significant for any of the hybrid combinations, indicating no genetic variability between the parents, in contrast with the observations of Ribeiro et al (2014a) for the IAC Boreal, Light Red Kidney and Ouro Branco cultivars. In this case, the differences in the soil pH, soil iron content and amount of precipitation during the growing season explain the variation that was observed in the iron concentrations of common bean seeds (Moraghan, Padilha, Etchevers, Grafton, & Acosta-Gallegos, 2002;Silva, Abreu, Ramalho, & Corrêa, 2012b;Petry, Boy, Wirth, & Hurrell, 2015;Possobom et al, 2015). Because the parents that were used in the controlled crosses were contrasting regarding the zinc concentration in their seeds, it was possible to obtain recombinants with genetic variability, with zinc concentrations ranging from 10.73 to 37.50 mg kg -1 DM ( Figure 1C and D).…”
Section: Genetic Variability and Maternal Effectmentioning
confidence: 97%