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Variability of Grain Arsenic Concentration and Speciation in Rice (Oryza sativa L.)

Arsenic is not an essential element and can be toxic to both plants and animals in high
concentration. There is a demonstrated association between soil arsenic (As) and the
occurrence of straighthead (a physiological disorder in rice characterized by panicle
sterility and yield loss); however, the relationship between grain-As accumulation and
straighthead susceptibility in rice is not yet fully understood. The objective of the
current study was to evaluate a set of diverse rice cultivars, including both indica and
japonica subspecies, for total grain-As (TGAs) and As-species concentrations in 2004,
2005, and 2007, on a native (moderate As-concentration) paddy soil and an adjacent
monosodium monomethylarsonate (MSMA) amended soil. Cultivars were evaluated
under both continuously flooded and intermittently flooded (saturated) field conditions. The genotypic differences in the occurrence of straighthead, total grain-As (TGAs) and
As-species concentrations, and their relationships with plant growth parameters, e.g.,
heading date, plant height, and yield were assessed. The cultivars exhibited a
considerable range in both TGAs and grain-As species concentrations.
In 2004 and 2005, twenty-one rice cultivars replicated on native soil under continuous
flooding showed significant differences in TGAs and As-species concentrations by
genotype and year. In 2005, heading was generally delayed in the rice cultivars,
resulting in reduced yields that were likely associated with unusually high temperatures
and prolonged exposure to stresses in the field, including prolonged flooding and
associated soil-As induced stresses. Lower grain-As concentrations were generally
associated with early maturing and high yielding genotypes, but with some exceptions.
Total grain-As concentrations were not correlated to straighthead susceptibility
suggesting that high As concentration in rice grain might not be a direct cause of the
genotype-dependent panicle sterility associated with MSMA in soil.
The rice cultivars grown on the MSMA-flooded treatment could be effectively
differentiated for their relative straighthead susceptibility, with scores ranging from 1 to
8 for the most resistant to the most susceptible genotypes, respectively. In general, traits
such as low grain-iAsIII concentration,early maturity, and high yield were correlated with
straighthead resistance. In the MSMA-flooded treatment, very high grain-As
accumulation resulted in elevated rice-grain dimethyl-AsV (DMAsV) concentration,
whereas, the concentration of the more harmful inorganic-AsIII species was less affected. The TGAs and As-species concentrations were considerably higher in
continuously--flooded soil than the intermittently-flooded soil. The variations in TGAs
and grain-DMAsV concentrations were more highly influenced by water regime than by
genotype, whereas, grain-iAIII concentrations were more highly genotype dependent. In
the native soil with intermittent flooding, the concentrations of grain-DMAsV and the
less desirable grain-iAIII concentrations were lowest. The study concluded that for
attaining lower As accumulation in the rice grain both genotype selection and water
management are potentially useful approaches.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7303
Date2009 December 1900
CreatorsPillai, Tushara Raghvan
ContributorsLoeppert, Richard H., Gentry, Terry J.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatapplication/pdf

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