Multi-environment Selection of Small Sieve Snap Beans Reduces Production Constraints in East Africa and Subtropical Regions

2012 
Small-sieve snap beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) are an important source of income for smallholder farmers in East Africa. In this region as well as in other tropical and subtropical environments, common bean rust, caused by Uromyces appendiculatus (Pers.:Pers.), and heat stress reduce the yield and quality of snap beans. Small-sieve rust- resistant snap beans and that are heat-tolerant were developed using heat-tolerant snap bean breeding lines that had broad-spectrum rust resistance conditioned by the combination of the Andean Ur-4 and Mesoamerican Ur-11 genes. The Ur-4 and Ur-11 rust gene combination confers resistance to 90 races of the hypervariable pathogen from different parts of the world, including East Africa, that are maintained at Beltsville, MD. Four breeding lines each having the combination of the two rust genes were crossed in a 4 ·5diallel mating design withfive susceptible small-sieve cultivars to give 20F1hybrids. The hybrid combinations were advanced through the F2 ,F 3, and F4 generations with selection for heat tolerance, rust resistance, and pod quality to develop lines combining these traits.TwentyF5breedinglines thathadthe combination of these traits wereselected andevaluatedinEastAfricaatfourfieldsitesselectedonthebasisofdifferencesinaltitude, climate, and virulence diversity of the bean rust pathogen and in Puerto Rico at a field site characterized by high temperatures. There was a significant positive correlation between ranks of heat stress influenced yield components (seeds per pod and total yield) at the hot field site and the controlled high-temperature (32/27 8C) greenhouse. Four of the breeding lines developed, L5, L9, L13, and L17, combined heat tolerance and rust resistance in the desired plant type with high yield and good pod quality. These lines are the first known small-sieve snap beans with the combination of traits for heat tolerance and broad- spectrumrustresistanceconferredbytheUr-4andUr-11genes.These results demonstrate ability to combine heat tolerance and rust resistance as important traits for adaptation of specific market classes of common bean to tropical and subtropical environments through targeted selection of multiple traits in controlled environments.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    20
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []