Evolution of glyphosate resistance in a Lolium rigidum population by glyphosate selection at sublethal doses

被引:0
|
作者
R Busi
S B Powles
机构
[1] Western Australian Herbicide Resistance Initiative,
[2] School of Plant Biology,undefined
[3] Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences,undefined
[4] The University of Western Australia,undefined
来源
Heredity | 2009年 / 103卷
关键词
recurrent selection; herbicide resistance evolution; glyphosate; VLR1 biotype; small population;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The majority of the documented cases of field-evolved herbicide-resistant weed biotypes established that single major genes confer glyphosate resistance. However, the contribution of minor genes endowing substantial plant survival at sublethal herbicide doses may be a potential complementary path to herbicide resistance evolution in weed populations under selection. Here, we subjected a number of susceptible individuals of Lolium rigidum to recurrent glyphosate selection to test the potential for sublethal glyphosate doses to additively select for glyphosate resistance. After 3–4 cycles of glyphosate selection in two distinct environments, the progenies of the initially susceptible population were shifted toward glyphosate resistance. The results indicate progressive enrichment of minor gene trait(s) contributing toward plant survival in the glyphosate-selected progenies. After three generations of selection, the estimated LD50 values were doubled compared with the original population and up to 33% plant survival was obtained in the glyphosate-selected progeny at the recommended glyphosate label rate. This level of resistance probably was the maximum shift achievable with sublethal glyphosate dose selection in this small population. Cross-pollination was a crucial factor enabling the rapid rate of accumulation of minor glyphosate resistance gene trait(s) that are likely to be present at a relatively high frequency in a small susceptible population. The mechanistic basis of the moderate glyphosate resistance level selected by sublethal glyphosate doses remains unknown and warrants future research. Studying the main factors influencing the evolution of resistant weed populations is crucial for understanding, predicting and managing herbicide resistance.
引用
收藏
页码:318 / 325
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Investigating the mechanisms of glyphosate resistance in Lolium multiflorum
    Alejandro Perez-Jones
    Kee-Woong Park
    Nick Polge
    Jed Colquhoun
    Carol A. Mallory-Smith
    Planta, 2007, 226 : 395 - 404
  • [32] Investigating the mechanisms of glyphosate resistance in Lolium multiflorum
    Perez-Jones, Alejandro
    Park, Kee-Woong
    Polge, Nick
    Colquhoun, Jed
    Mallory-Smith, Carol A.
    PLANTA, 2007, 226 (02) : 395 - 404
  • [33] Ecological fitness of a glyphosate-resistant Lolium rigidum population:: Growth and seed production along a competition gradient
    Pedersen, Bolette P.
    Neve, Paul
    Andreasen, Christian
    Powles, Stephen B.
    BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2007, 8 (03) : 258 - 268
  • [34] Glyphosate-resistant population of Lolium perenne loses resistance at winter temperatures
    Ghanizadeh, H.
    Harrington, K. C.
    James, T. K.
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH, 2015, 58 (04) : 423 - 431
  • [35] Resistance to glyphosate in Lolium rigidum selected in Italian perennial crops: bioevaluation, management and molecular bases of target-site resistance
    Collavo, A.
    Sattin, M.
    WEED RESEARCH, 2012, 52 (01) : 16 - 24
  • [36] Phytotoxicity of different glyphosate formulations in simazine-resistant and -susceptible Lolium rigidum biotypes
    Gonzalez-Gutierrez, J
    De Prado, RA
    50TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON CROP PROTECTION, PTS I-IV, 1998, 50 : 303 - 308
  • [37] Effect of Adjuvant on Glyphosate Effectiveness, Retention, Absorption and Translocation in Lolium rigidum and Conyza canadensis
    Palma-Bautista, Candelario
    Vazquez-Garcia, Jose G.
    Travlos, Ilias
    Tataridas, Alexandros
    Kanatas, Panagiotis
    Dominguez-Valenzuela, Jose A.
    De Prado, Rafael
    PLANTS-BASEL, 2020, 9 (03):
  • [38] Reduced Glyphosate Translocation in Two Glyphosate-Resistant Populations of Rigid Ryegrass (Lolium rigidum) from Fence Lines in South Australia
    Adu-Yeboah, Patricia
    Malone, Jenna M.
    Gill, Gurjeet
    Preston, Christopher
    WEED SCIENCE, 2014, 62 (01) : 4 - 10
  • [39] Rigid Ryegrass (Lolium rigidum) Populations Containing a Target Site Mutation in EPSPS and Reduced Glyphosate Trans location Are More Resistant to Glyphosate
    Bostamam, Yazid
    Malone, Jenna M.
    Dolman, Fleur C.
    Boutsalis, Peter
    Preston, Christopher
    WEED SCIENCE, 2012, 60 (03) : 474 - 479
  • [40] Glyphosate resistance in Sorghum halepense and Lolium rigidum is reduced at suboptimal growing temperatures (vol 69, pg 228, 2013)
    Vila-Aiub, Martin M.
    Gundel, Pedro E.
    Yu, Qin
    Powles, Stephen B.
    PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2013, 69 (05) : 666 - 666