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Pollen Flow in Wheat Revisited

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Title: Pollen Flow in Wheat Revisited


1
Pollen Flow in Wheat Revisited
  • Joel Ransom
  • Extension Agronomist Cereal Crops

2
Why renewed interest in pollen flow in wheat?
  • Steady progress in the development of wheat with
    transgenic traits
  • Certain markets have indicated that they require
    non-transgenic wheat
  • Pollen drift is one of many factors to consider
    when maintaining segregation
  • Information on out-crossing in wheat can help
    design effective identity preserved (IP) programs

3
How does gene flow via pollen drift occur?
  • Some biology
  • Pollen is produced in anthers
  • Fertilization requires viable pollen to attach to
    a receptive stigma and the successful transfer to
    genetic material to the ovule.

4
Facts about wheat pollen
  • Relatively heavy
  • Viable for 2 to 20 minutes
  • 2,000 to 4,000 pollen grains per flower

5
Factors affecting gene flow via pollen
  • Distance between plants
  • Temperature
  • Humidity
  • Wind
  • Insects
  • Variety
  • Receptivity of the stigma
  • Nick (synchrony of flowering)
  • Pollen viability

6
Gene Flow via pollen in Wheat Current State of
Knowledge
  • Review of pollen movement studies
  • Review of information from out-crossing studies
  • Isolation distances
  • Varietal effects

7
How far can wheat pollen move?
Adapted from Khan et al, 1973 (Kansas)
8
Pollination of a male sterile
Adapted from Khan et al, 1973
9
Summary on pollen movement
  • Viable wheat pollen can move gt 150 ft
  • Based on male sterile plants, cross pollination
    risk greatest in first 20 ft of isolation from
    source
  • Fertilization success dependant on pollen
    concentration

10
Effect of variety and year on out-crossing in
adjacent plants in Kansas, HRWW
Adapted from Martin, 1990
11
Effect of variety and year on out-crossing
(92-93), HRSW, Canada
Adapted from Hucl, 1996
12
Effect of isolation distance on out-crossing of
four Canadian wheat cultivars, 1995
Adapted from Hucl Matus-Cadiz, 2001
13
Source Ostby et al., 2004
14
Factors conferring varietal differences in
cross-pollination propensity
  • Glume opening
  • Extrusion of anthers
  • Duration of opening
  • Open spikelets vs dense spikes

15
What are the practical implications of these data?
  • Environment and variety can influence level of OC
  • In the two studies with spring wheat summarized a
    distance gt 33-59 ft sufficient gave zero
    outcrossing in HRSW
  • Isolation distance gt90 high probability of zero
    or minimal out-crossing

16
What are typical isolation distances in IP
systems in ND currently?
  • Methodology
  • Fields (within/between farms) sampled
  • 8 Organic fields
  • 8 certified/foundation seed production fields
  • 3 IP fields
  • Distance between closest wheat crop measured (all
    edges and corners)
  • Distance of natural isolation distance measured

17
Results
  • Organic production fields (isolation required
    from non-organic fields - ? distance)
  • Natural isolation
  • Minimum distance 0 ft
  • Maximum 250 ft
  • Average 57 ft
  • Median 45 ft
  • Actual
  • Minimum distance - 48
  • Maximum 21,120
  • Average - 2640
  • Median - 2640

18
Results
  • Certified Seed Production (current regulations
    5 ft)
  • Natural isolation
  • Minimum distance 0 ft
  • Maximum 165 ft
  • Average 43 ft
  • Median 42 ft
  • Actual
  • Minimum distance - 5
  • Maximum 21,120
  • Average 4,933
  • Median 2,640

19
Results
  • Identity Preserved (isolation specified in
    contract)
  • Natural isolation
  • Minimum distance 0 ft
  • Maximum 500 ft
  • Average 97 ft
  • Median 50 ft
  • Actual
  • Minimum distance 1 ft
  • Maximum 15,840 ft
  • Average 2,039 ft
  • Median 152 ft

20
Summary on isolation distances
  • Natural boundaries typically 50 feet
  • Fields are not always separated by natural
    boundaries
  • If new standards of OC established for
    non-transgenic wheat requiring greater isolation
    (i.e. 60-90 ft)
  • Most but not all IP fields currently close to
    these distances
  • Seed production would be most impacted

21
Conclusions
  • With an isolation distance of 60 - 90 ft
    (conservative based on the most promiscuous
    cultivar) there is limited risk of gene flow via
    pollen between cultivars of HRSW
  • Zero tolerance cannot be guaranteed with this
    distance, however, as pollen is capable of much
    farther movement
  • Current IP systems frequently have isolation
    distances approaching 60 ft, but sometimes much
    less
  • Natural boundaries alone for isolation is not
    workable due to layout of fields

22
Conclusions
  • Revised isolation distances in IP would likely
    not be too difficult to achieve
  • Isolation distances in seed production would need
    to be revised to ensure increased purity
  • Given limited out-crossing and current field
    layouts, gene flow from transgenic wheat to
    non-transgenic wheat will likely be minimal and
    manageable. Other factors in segregation process
    will present greater challenges?
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