Journal article

Chromosomal loci associated with endosperm hardness in a malting barley cross

CK Walker, JF Panozzo, R Ford, P Eckermann, D Moody, A Lehmensiek, R Appels

Theoretical and Applied Genetics | SPRINGER | Published : 2011

Abstract

A breeding objective for the malting barley industry is to produce lines with softer, plumper grain containing moderate protein content (9-12%) as they are more likely to imbibe water readily and contain more starch per grain, which in turn produces higher levels of malt extract. In a malting barley mapping population, 'Arapiles' × 'Franklin', the most significant and robust quantitative trait locus (QTL) for endosperm hardness was observed on the short arm of chromosome 1H, across three environments over two growing seasons. This accounted for 22.6% (Horsham 2000), 26.8% (Esperance 2001), and 12.0% (Tarranyurk 2001) of the genetic variance and significantly increased endosperm hardness by 2..

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University of Melbourne Researchers