2012
DOI: 10.3198/jpr2012.02.0140crc
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Registration of ‘Eldorado’ Pinto Bean

Abstract: ‘Eldorado’ (Reg. No. CV‐302, PI 665012) pinto bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), which was developed by Michigan State University AgBioResearch, was released in 2012 as an upright, full‐season, disease‐resistant cultivar. Eldorado, tested as MSU breeding line P07863, was developed using the single‐seed‐descent breeding method to the F4 generation followed by pedigree selection for disease, agronomic, and quality traits. In 5 yr of field trials, Eldorado yielded 3364 kg ha−1, flowered in 42 d, and matured in 98 d. P… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…The QTL on Pv03 (B3) is associated with disease avoidance traits such as canopy porosity, plant height, stay green stem trait, and maturity . The QTL responsible for white mold avoidance resides in P07863, the highest yielding RIL in the AP630 population that has since been released as the cultivar Eldorado (Kelly et al, 2012). Ex Rico 23 was first identified by Tu and Beversdorf (1982) as a source of avoidance to white mold and has been used subsequently in other QTL studies for white mold (Kolkman and Kelly, 2003).…”
Section: White Mold Quantitative Trait Loci Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The QTL on Pv03 (B3) is associated with disease avoidance traits such as canopy porosity, plant height, stay green stem trait, and maturity . The QTL responsible for white mold avoidance resides in P07863, the highest yielding RIL in the AP630 population that has since been released as the cultivar Eldorado (Kelly et al, 2012). Ex Rico 23 was first identified by Tu and Beversdorf (1982) as a source of avoidance to white mold and has been used subsequently in other QTL studies for white mold (Kolkman and Kelly, 2003).…”
Section: White Mold Quantitative Trait Loci Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plants develop a dense leaf canopy at flowering that freely lodges, creating a microclimate favorable for disease development under the decumbent plant canopy (Miklas et al, 2013). These include pinto cultivars such as Santa Fe (Kelly et al, 2010), Lariat, and Stampede (Osorno et al, 2010), Eldorado (Kelly et al, 2012), and the private cultivar La Paz that possess different levels of architectural avoidance to white mold. These include pinto cultivars such as Santa Fe (Kelly et al, 2010), Lariat, and Stampede (Osorno et al, 2010), Eldorado (Kelly et al, 2012), and the private cultivar La Paz that possess different levels of architectural avoidance to white mold.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With regard to the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), breeding for white mold resistance has advanced recently, especially in the United States, where several studies on the genetic mechanisms of resistance and breeding strategies have been carried out (Terán and Singh, 2009;Terán and Singh, 2010;Singh et al, 2014;Viteri and Singh, 2015) and a number of partially resistant lines have been released (Griffiths, 2009;Kelly et al, 2012;Miklas et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But in a practical cultivar development program these could also be of significant value for slowing disease development and reducing fungicide usage. Thus, it is necessary to combine the above method of greenhouse screening with simultaneous selection for seed yield and avoidance traits under white mold pressure in the field (Ender et al, 2008;Kelly et al, 2012;Kolkman and Kelly, 2003;Miklas et al, 2012Miklas et al, , 2013Mkwaila et al, 2011). For that region, it may be prudent to use intensive greenhouse screenings and selection similar to this study for development of cultivars with high levels of physiological resistance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%