Mutation Studies of an Oilseed Spurge Rich in Vernolic Acid
1992
Pascual, M. J. | Correal, E.
Euphorbia lagascae Spreng., a wild spurge native to southeastern Spain, is being evaluated as a potential new oilseed crop. It has high seed oil content, with 58 to 62% vernolic acid, a long-chain unsaturated fatty acid with several applications for the chemical industry. Seed dehiscence is a common problem of all 62 accessions collected to date. The objective of this work was to use chemically induced mutagenesis to develop nonshattering lines. Self-pollinated M₂, M₃, and M₄ plants were observed in the field in Spain. Three indehiscent mutants were found in the M₂ and M₃ generations of ethyl methanesulfonate-treated seed, together with four quatricarpellate mutants containing capsules with >3 seeds capsule⁻¹. The M₃ and M₄ progenies of mutant plants were studied and the following results were observed: (i) indehiscent plants transferred the character to ≈3.5 and 5% of their M₃ and M₄ progenies, respectively; (ii) indehiscent plants had on the average 2 seeds capsule⁻¹, one-third less than normal plants; (iii) M₃ quatricarpellate mutants transferred this character, on average, to 40 to 60% of their M₄ progeny and produced 10 to 30% more seeds per plant with the same number of capsules.
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