What makes lentil less sensitive to the light quality and its potential usage

What makes lentil less sensitive to the light quality and its potential usage

 

Light is essential for plant growth and development. Green plants selectively absorb blue and red wavelengths of the light, which resulted in a decrease in red/far-red (R/FR) ratio in the surrounding environment. The reduction is sensed by the plants, thereby signaling the presence of neighboring plants/weeds as potential competition, which would lead to enhanced stem elongation and accelerated transition to flowering. However, for crop species, this could lead to decreased yield if plants spend resources on vegetative growth at the expense of reproductive development. Wild lentils tend to be less sensitive to red/far-red related light quality change compared to cultivated ones. We intend to investigate responses in a wide range of lentil genotypes by looking at responses to contrasting R/FR in a controlled environmental growth facility as well as in the field. The presence of the variability in response to shifts in R/FR would suggest there are cultivated lines that should be studied for their adaptation to variable light environments. We are phenotyping and genotyping one interspecific RIL population and a sub-selection of the lentil diversity panel with a view to tag regions of the lentil genome associated with the sensitivity to light quality and to discover their potential usages in lentil breeding program.

 

 

Genotype Experiment
Genotyping Assay


RADseq (LR-86)

QTL mapping

Exome Capture Sequencing (Lentil Diversity Panel)

Genome Wide Association Mapping (GWAS)

Transcriptomic analysis using RNAseq
Phenotype Experiment
Phenotypic Traits


Days to emergence

Days to flower

Days to pod maturity

Internode length

Plant height

Seed production (Yield)

Above-ground biomass
Location(s) of Field Trials
Saskatchewan, Canada