Heat Waves and Broomrape Are the Major Constraints for Lentil Cultivation in Southern Spain
Loading...
Publication date
Advisors
Department
Research group
Center
Related publication
Abstract
There is potential for expanding lentil cultivation to dry and warm Mediterranean rain-fed
environments at low altitudes, where early sowings are recommended to profit from winter rains and
escape drought and excessive heat at the grain filling stage. In cooler areas, frost might be a problem
in the early sowings, however, in warmer areas such as our low altitude warm southern Spanish
environments the most detrimental factor on lentil seed yield appeared to be high temperatures
at grain-filling stage, particularly heat waves of more than 5 days with Tmax > 30 ◦C. This was
followed by broomrape infection, the combination of both being dramatic. We detected variation
for stress tolerance, with S17 and R7 accessions outstanding for all stress indexes used, followed by
S23, Nsir, S6, and S12. Broomrape infection ranked second risk in the area. No complete resistance
to broomrape was identified, but there was a significant variation in the level of infection, with
accessions S14 and R17 being the more resistant across environments. This offers prospects for
combining heat tolerance and broomrape resistance by breeding
Unesco Subjects
Bibliographic citation
Rubiales, D., Moral, A., & Flores, F. (2021). Heat Waves and Broomrape Are the Major Constraints for Lentil Cultivation in Southern Spain. In Agronomy (Vol. 11, Issue 9, p. 1871). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11091871











