水稻育种相关专业词汇与术语 整理版

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水稻名词解释和问答

水稻名词解释和问答

名词解释1、安全齐穗期:生产中常将秋季连续2天或3天低于20-23℃的始日定为安全齐花期,向前推5天为安全齐穗期。

2、拔节:水稻基部节间开始显著伸长,株高开始迅速增加的现象。

3、拔节长穗期: 长穗期从穗分化开始到抽穗止,一般需要30d左右,生产上也常称拔节长穗期。

4、保花肥:防止颖花退化的肥料称为保花肥,一般雌雄形成至花粉母细胞减数分裂期施肥。

5、超重期:指种子出苗后经过一定的生长,植株总干重超过原有种子干重的时期。

6、抽穗::穗顶即露出剑叶鞘,即为抽穗。

7、出叶间隔: 相邻两片叶伸出的时间间隔,称为出叶间隔。

8、促花肥:在第一苞分化至第一次枝梗原基分化时追肥,有促进颖花数增多的效果,称“促花肥”。

9、稻谷催芽:是根据种子发芽过程中对温度、水分和空气的要求,利用人为措施,创造良好发芽条件,使发芽达到“快、齐、匀、壮”。

10、生态需水:生态需水:生态需水是指利用水作为生态因子,造成一个适于水稻生育的良好环境而需要的水。

主要包括棵间蒸发和稻田渗漏两部分。

11、稻米品质:稻米在加工、外观、食用、营养以及安全等方面的特性,它既反映稻米内在自然属性,又体现其社会属性的一组综合性状。

13、断奶肥:幼苗在1叶1心时,胚乳中贮藏的氮已经用完,是氮断奶期,为了满足这时幼苗生长对氮的需要而施用肥料,一般生产上1叶1心时施用。

14、垩白度:垩白米率与垩白面积的乘积为垩白度。

15、垩白米率:是整精米中垩白米粒的百分比16、垩白面积是垩白占整粒米投影面积百分比。

17、发根率:单位时间或单位地上部干重的必根能力,如发根重对地上部干重的百分重表示。

18、发芽势:表示种子的发芽的整齐度,以规定的时间内发芽种子数占供试种子数的百分数来衡量。

19、发育特性:指影响稻株从营养生长向生殖生长转变的若干特性。

20、返青分蘖期:是指移栽到幼穗分化以前的时期。

21、返青期:秧苗移栽后,由于根系损伤,有一个地上部生长停滞和萌发新根的过程,约需5d左右才恢复正常生长,称返青期。

(完整版)水稻基础知识

(完整版)水稻基础知识

迟熟粳
“强-强-短”型: 华中晚稻籼
“弱-中-长”型: 华中中熟籼, 及粳、云贵的迟熟籼及粳
中籼稻主要类型
“强-中-中”型: 华南晚稻的
“弱-强-长”型: 华南及云贵
迟熟粳、云贵的迟熟籼
的冬稻籼
“强-强-中”型: 华南一季粳
“中-中-短”型: 华北的中、
(三)水稻发育特性理论的应用
1.在栽培技术方面的应用
是水稻营养体的增长,包括种子发芽和根、 茎、叶、蘖的增长,并为过渡到生殖生长期积累 必要的养分。分为幼苗期和分蘖期。
(1)幼苗期: 从稻种萌动开始至3叶期。
(2)返青期: 秧苗移栽后,由于根系损伤,有 一个地上部生长停滞和萌发新根的过程,约需5d 左右才恢复正常生长,这段时间称返青期。
(3)分蘖期: 从4叶长出开始萌发分蘖直到拔 节为止。返青后分蘖不断发生,到开始拔节时, 分蘖数达到高峰。杂交水稻由于稀播,通常在秧 田即开始分蘖。
部分组成。
分蘖节或根节: 稻茎基部的节间不伸长, 各节密集,节上发生根和分蘖,习惯上称它为
分蘖节或根节。
茎秆: 茎上部有若干伸长的节间形成茎秆。
6.穗的发育 (1)形态结构
小穗 稻 二次枝梗 穗 一次枝梗
小穗梗 穗轴
(2)稻穗的分化发育
稻穗分化时期的检查: ①第一苞原基分
化到花药形成以前, 以全穗发育为对象划 分发育时期;
分蘖位: 分蘖在母茎 上所处的叶位。
(2)分蘖特性
1)分蘖叶位数: 凡分 蘖叶位数多的品种,分 蘖期长,生育期一般也
较长。
(2)分蘖特性
2)对环境条件敏感: 在分蘖叶位数相同的品 种间,但对温、光、水、肥等条件敏感的品种, 当条件不适宜时,分蘖芽处于休眠状态,分蘖发 生率低。

育种学各论,考试重点

育种学各论,考试重点

育种学各论,考试重点育种学各论水稻一、名词解释雄性不育系:具有雄性不育特性(花粉败育)的品系或者自交系——S(rr)保持系:其花粉给不育系授粉,后代具有保持其雄性不育特性的品系或者自交系——N(rr)。

恢复系:其花粉给不育系授粉后代正常的品系或者自交系——N(RR)、S(RR)。

两系法杂交水稻:由光温敏核不育系和恢复系培育成的杂交水稻称作两系法杂交水稻。

光温敏核不育系,恢复系三系杂交水稻:由三系的不育系和保持系制备的不育系和恢复系杂交制成杂交种水稻。

原生质体:是指没有细胞壁的、裸露的、具有生命力的原生质团。

植物细胞的全能性:是指每一个植株细胞经过脱分化形成愈伤组织再经再分化形成植株。

水稻三性:是指水稻的感温性、感光性、基本营养生长性。

感温性:在光照长度基本相同的条件下,随着温度的提高,抽穗期相应提早的现象,称作水稻品种对温度的反应特性。

感光性:在温度基本相同的条件下,随着光照长度的缩短,抽穗期相应提早,称为水稻品种对日长的反应特性,也称作感光性。

基本营养性:品种在不同的温度和不同的光照条件下,其播种到出穗的日数表现出相对的稳定,称为基本营养生长性。

绿色超级稻:具有抗主要病虫害,水分、养分高效吸收和利用的优质高产水稻。

原位保存:在野生稻原始生态环境下,采用一定的设施,人为地就地保存和保护野生稻种资。

异位保存:将野生稻搬到新的地点进行种植保存的方式。

离体保存:采集种子和植株部分在人工控制条件下保存种质。

垩白率:垩白粒占供试米粒数的百分比。

垩白大小:垩白投影面积占整个米粒投影面积的百分比。

垩白度:垩白率和垩白大小的乘积。

质核互作不育性:指的是雄性不育性由细胞核基因和细胞质基因共同控制的雄性不育类型。

光温敏核不育水稻:指由于受和基因的控制对温度和光照长度反应敏感,在长日照条件下表现出雄性不育特性的水稻植株。

水稻广亲和性:指一些中间型水稻材料,与籼稻和粳稻杂交,F1都能正常结实。

具有这种特性的品种,称为广亲和品种。

作物育种学名词解释

作物育种学名词解释

作物育种学名词解释名词解释作物育种学:研究选育及繁殖作物优良品种的理论与方法的科学。

品种:人类在一定的生态条件和经济条件下人工培育的某种作物的群体,这种群体如果经过一系列试验表现优良,通过品种审定就成为品种。

育种目标:农业生产对品种优良性的要求株型育种:改良品种、株型态势的育种,例如植株的高度,茎叶在空间的分布高光效育种:以提高光合效率为主的遗传改良,作物产量=(光合能力某光合时间某光合效率-呼吸消耗)某经济系数种质资源:可以被植物遗传育种,研究和利用的各种生物类型。

地方品种:在历史上局部地区栽培,没有经过现代育种技术修饰种植保存:种质资源材料每隔一段时间播种一次。

贮藏保存:主要是控制贮藏时的温湿条件的方法来保持种质资源种子的生活力。

离体保存:用试管保存组织或细胞培养物的方法来有效地保存种质资源材料,此方法繁殖速度快,还可避免病虫的危害核心种质:指最少量的资源材料的遗传多样性遗传多样性:种内不同个体间或一个群体内不同个体间的遗传多样性有性繁殖:通过有性过程产生两性细胞的结合,形成种子繁衍后代的繁殖方式自花授粉:雌蕊接受同一朵花或同一植株花朵的花粉自花授粉作物:在自然条件下,主要依靠自花授粉繁殖后代的作物。

异花授粉:雌蕊接受异株或异花花粉的称为异花授粉。

异花授粉作物:在自然条件下,通过异花授粉方式繁殖后代的作物则为异花授粉作物无性繁殖:不通过两性细胞的结合而繁殖后代的的反之方式。

无性系:植物的一部分营养体通过无性繁殖得到后代。

自交系品种:个体基因型纯和,群体同质,这样的一群个体组成的群体杂交种品种:个体基因型杂合,群体同质,具有杂种优势,这样的F1代群体及杂交种品种群体品种:遗传基础复杂,群体内植株基因型内有一定程度的杂合或异质性的一群植株群体无性系品种:是由一个无性系或几个遗传上近似的无性系经过营养器官繁殖而成的植株群体生态因素:指对作物生长发育有明显的影响或被植物直接吸收的因素,影响最大的是气候因素,如温度,日照,雨量生态环境:各种生态因素的综合体生态区:指对某种作物来说具有大致相似的环境地区生态型:指在一定的环境内莆成具有相似生态特性的品种类型称作物品种的生态型驯化:指人类为了让植物适应新的地理环境,而对其适应能力的利用和改造引种:①狭义:指从外国或外地引进作物新品种通过适应性试验直接在本地推广种植;②广义:从外地或外国引进新植物,新作物,新品种,品系以及供研究用的各种遗传资源材料选择:从群体中根据个体的表现型挑取符合育种目标的基因型(群体分为自然变异的群体和人工培育的群体,此指前者)品系:来自不同祖先,基因型相对一致,表现型相对整齐一致这样的个体所组成的群体鉴定:利用科学的方法对育种材料作出客观的评介选择育种:直接利用自然变异通过混合选择或单株选择的方法选育新品种系统育种:直接利用自然变异,通过单株选择的方法选育新品种称为系统育种剩余变异:指自交后代群体中残留的杂合基因所引起的变异杂交育种:通过不同品种间的杂交并且对后代进行选择的育种方法远缘杂交:种或种以上不同作物的杂交组合育种:利用基因的重组和互作,控制不同性状的优良基因,通过杂交重组后可以把不同亲本的优良性状结合在一起超亲育种:利用基因的累加和互作,控制同一性状的微小基因,通过基因重组后再通过累加和互作使产生的新性状超过任何同一亲本叫超亲育种杂交方式:在一个杂交组合中用几个亲本以及各个亲本的先后顺序叫杂交方式复交:3个或3个以上的亲本进行2次或2次以上的杂交叫复交单交:两个亲本进行杂交叫单交双交:三个或四个亲本,指两个单交的F1再杂交系统群:来自同一系统的不同单株所形成的系统叫系统群姊妹系:同一系统群内的不同系统之间互称姊妹系回交育种:通过回交,选择改良品种的方法。

作物育种各论题库

作物育种各论题库

作物育种各论题库水稻部分一、名词解释:名词解释: (1) 雄性不育系:具有雄性不育特性(花粉败育)的品系或者自交系——S(rr)。

(2) 保持系:其花粉给不育系授粉,后代具有保持其雄性不育特性的品系或者自交系——N(rr)。

(3) 恢复系:其花粉给不育系授粉后代正常的品系或者自交系——N(RR)、S(RR)。

(4) 二系水稻:由光温敏核不育水稻不育系和恢复系杂交育成的杂交水稻,此法实现了一系二用,省去了保持系。

(5) 三系水稻:由三系的不育系和保持系制备的不育系和恢复系杂交制成杂交种水稻。

(6) 太空育种:利用航天工具搭载种子进入太空,利用其高真空、微重力、强的宇宙射线使种子发生诱变从而育种作物新品种的方法。

(7) 光温敏核不育水稻:由光照和温度主导其育性的转换,在其低温短日条件下可育高温长日条件下核不育的水稻。

(8) 孢子体不育:是指花粉育性的表现受孢子体(母体植株)的基因控制与花粉(配子体)身的基因无关。

(9) 配子体不育:是指不育系的花粉败育发生在配子体形成阶段,花粉的育性受配子体身基因型控制。

因此配子体基因为不育时花粉表现不育,配子体基因为可育时花粉表现正常。

(10) 诱变育种:是利用理化生的方法诱导作物发生变异,再经过人为选择育成作物新品种的方法。

(11) 变异体:没有经过人为施加压力使作物自然发生变异经过选择形成的变异个体。

(12) 突变体:经过人为的施加压力使作物发生变异筛选出的无性系变异。

(13) 原生质体:是指没有细胞壁的、裸露的、具有生命力的原生质团。

(14) 胞质杂种:是指在原生质体融合的前提条件下,是其中之一的细胞核有目的消失形成的细胞质杂交的种。

(15) 广亲和性基因:是指一些中间型水稻与籼稻和粳稻都能杂交成功,这种水稻称广亲和性水稻,这种水稻所具有的基因称为广亲和性基因。

(16) 垩白大小:垩白的投影面积占整个米粒投影面积的百分比。

(17) 垩白率:具有垩白米粒占整个供试验米粒的百分数。

作物育种学名词解释及问答资料

作物育种学名词解释及问答资料

品种(作物品种):是人类在一定的生态环境和经济条件下,根据人类的需要所选育的某种作物的一定群体种质资源:指一切具有特定的种质或基因,可供育种及相关研究利用的各种生物类型。

育种目标:对新品种的性状的具体要求,是育种工作的依据和指南。

好比一项工程的蓝图。

育种目标正确是育种工作成功的关键。

有性繁殖:生物通过有性过程产生的雌雄配子结合,形成合子发育成新个体繁殖后代,有完整的个体发育周期无性繁殖:利用营养器官或体细胞等繁殖后代的方式。

即不通过雌雄性细胞相互结合而繁殖后代的方式自花授粉:同一朵花的花粉传到同一朵花的雌蕊柱头上,或同株的花粉传播到同株的雌蕊柱头上。

常异花授粉作物:同时依靠自花授粉和异花授粉两种方式繁殖后代的作物称为常异花授粉作物。

异花授粉作物:通过植株不同花朵的花粉进行传粉而繁殖后代的作物。

自交不亲和性:某些作物具有完全花,并可以形成正常的雌雄配子,但自交不结实或结实极少的特性。

雄性不育: 雌蕊发育正常,雄蕊退化(无花粉、无花药等)无性系:无性繁殖作物的一个个体通过无性繁殖而产生的后代称为无性繁殖系,简称~。

无性系品种:由一个无性系或几个近似的无性系经过营养器官的繁殖而成。

基因型由母体决定,个体内基因型杂合或纯合,个体间一致杂交育种:通常指利用作物具有不同遗传性的品种或类型相互杂交,创造遗传变异,然后再通过选择和系统的试验鉴定,培育成新品种的方法。

广义的杂交育种还包括回交和远缘杂交。

群体品种:指由基因型不同的植株组成的个体群。

引种(广义):以外地区,外国引进新植物、新作物、新品种以及遗传育种等有关理论研究所需的各种种质资源气候相似论:“地区之间在影响作物生长的主要气候因素上,应相似到足以保证作物品种相互引种成功时,引种才有成功的可能性”。

系统育种法:根据育种目标,从现有品种群体的变异类型中选出优良的变异个体,种植成株系,通过试验鉴定,育成新品种。

又称单株选择法、一株传选择法单交种:2 个品种或自交系组配成的杂交种。

种植水稻技术你懂多少

种植水稻技术你懂多少

种植水稻技术你懂多少一、选用良种优良品种是获得高产的关键之一。

应选择经当地试验成功的品种来种植:杂交稻有冈优364、冈优527、超级稻两优2186、杂交优质稻有宜香101、滇汕优9号等。

常规种有博选系列种,滇瑞449、傣黎406以及一些糯稻种。

二、培育壮秧俗话说“秧好一半谷”。

壮秧的标准是:①秧苗挺健、叶色深绿。

②秧苗矮壮、基部粗扁。

③根系发达、白根粗而多。

④生长均匀整齐。

⑤秧龄、叶龄适当。

1、播期选样,将水稻生长对环境最敏感时期安排在最理想的时期是获得高产的关键。

在我市辖区一般早稻在头年11月下旬开始播种,一季中稻按排在3月下旬后播种,晚稻在7月前播种,就能获得安全和理想的收成。

2、种子处理,每亩用种量,杂交稻种1.5~2.0公斤,常规稻种2.0~3.0公斤。

播前晒种2天,再经水选种和种子消毒,这样有利于种子出芽整齐和苗齐苗壮。

选种可用风选或泥水选种。

选出的种子要分开浸种催芽处理,以防止相互影响。

消毒可用1%右灰水或随种子带来的消毒剂处理种子。

3、浸种催芽,早稻48小时、中稻24小时、晚稻24小时即可,要求每天换水1~2次,这样可有效防止浸种液出现发酸味和促进出芽整齐。

催芽应掌握“高温破胸(露白)、适温齐根芽”的原则。

早稻种不易升温可用温水(40°C~50°C)淋种,以促进种子迅速升温。

待根、芽长破壳出后就可播种,以种芽露白即播种为佳。

4、育秧方式有旱育秧、小拱棚膜育种(早稻)、常规水育秧、软盘育秧和塑盘育抛秧等。

旱育稀植是一项成功的技术,几年前已在大面积推广,但现在多数农户为图方便其将育秧方式已异化了,达不到应有的效果。

操作程序为,每亩大田用秧床10平方米(净面积),用农家20公斤,纯N、P、K各480克、255克和500克,翻耙入苗床中,浇透水后将厢面拍平,每平方米播干种100克或140克湿种,盖上过筛细土至不见种即可。

苗叶不卷叶不浇水,播后25天即可移栽。

目前可用国家农技推广总站建议推广的“旱育保姆”技术,将浸种后的湿谷或刚露芽谷进行拌种包衣后即可播种。

(完整word版)水稻育种

(完整word版)水稻育种

水稻育种名词解释:籼稻:粳稻:水稻感温性:水稻因受温度高低影响而改变其生育期的特性水稻感光性:水稻因受日照长短的影响而改变其生育期长短的特性,称为水稻对日长的反应特性野败型水稻不育系:光温敏核不育系:营养品质:主要包括精米中蛋白质含量和赖氨酸含量稻米加工品质:稻米外观品质:主要包括整精米的粒型(用长宽比表示)、垩白粒率、垩白度和透明度等指标垩白:是由于稻谷胚乳的淀粉和蛋白质颗粒在形成时不够密实而所形成垩白粒率:就是指含有垩白的整精米占供试整精米数量的百分率垩白大小:是指供试整精米中垩白部分投影面积占整精米总投影面积的平均百分率垩白度:就是垩白粒率与垩白大小的乘积。

蒸煮食用品质:主要包括糊化温度(GT)、直链淀粉含量(AC)、胶稠度(GC)、米粒延伸性和香味。

糊化温度:是指米的淀粉粒在热水中开始发生不可逆的膨胀,丧失其双折射性和结晶性的临界温度,一般以稻米的碱消值(ASV)间接测定糊化温度。

胶稠度:是指米粒糊化后,4.4%米胶在平板上的流淌长度;其反映了米饭的软硬程度绿色超级稻:水稻基本营养生长期:在最适于水稻生长发育的短日照、高温条件下,水稻品种也要经过一个必不可少的最低限度的营养生长期才能进入生殖生长、开始幼穗分化。

这个不受短日照、高温影响而缩短的营养生长期,称为“基本营养生长期”或“短日高温生长期”。

水稻广亲和性:中稻:杂交育种:是通过人工杂交将两个或两个以上亲本的优良性状综合到一个个体中,继而从分离的后代群体中,通过人工选择、培育和比较鉴定,获得遗传性相对稳定、有栽培利用价值的定型新品种的育种方法。

糯稻:秥稻:育种目标:是指在一定的自然、栽培和经济条件下,对计划选育的新品种提出应具备的优良特征特性,即对育成品种在生物学和经济学性状上的具体要求。

(高产、优质、稳产、生育期适宜、适于机械化操作)常规水稻:是指遗传特性稳定、当代和后代性状一致的品种,正常情况下可以留种,生产上不需要每年制种的水稻。

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水稻词汇与术语The need for a general glossary of the terminology used in rice production and rice research has been evident in the production of earlier documents, such as the Dictionary of Commonly Used Terms in Crop Improvement With particular reference to Rice, by A.O. Abifarin of IITA, Nigeria, in 1984, and the Rice Production Glossary published by IRRI in 1990.The present Glossary, loaded in September 1996, includes most of the terms used in these books and many more. Major additions came from glossaries annexed to proceedings of rice conferences and workshops published in the past by IRRI and partners.It was first compiled by Janice Puckridge. Gene Hettel coordinated the review by IRRI scientists who made various additions and corrections. Jay Maclean did the final sorting and collation and prepared the Glossary for the Web page.Thanks to all those who contributed to the Glossary. It is a tedious rather than a glamorous task, but the efforts by the various scientists and editors should be much appreciated by all who use this Glossary.The definitions given herein pertain only to the agricultural usage of the terms, many of which have other or broader meanings not described. However, given this restriction, it would nevertheless be presumptuous to suggest that the Glossary is fully accurate or complete. We welcome and look forward to additions and corrections for future editions, which will make the Glossary even more helpful.Downloaded by Huang Hui from IRRI.- 2 -A Terms A line .The male sterile parent involving cytoplasmic or cytoplasmic genetic male sterility developed to produce hybrid seed. It is also known as a cytoplasmic male sterile line.abnormal growth . Growth that deviates from the normal type or form due to various environmental factors such as disease, pests, soil condition, humidity, temperature, etc.absolute plating efficiency .The number of individual cells that give rise to colonies relative to the number of cells plated; expressed in percentage.absorb . To take in by chemical or molecular action or use as nourishment in the physiological processes of the plant.absorption . The process by which a substance passes from one system into another, e.g., from the soil solution into a plant's root cell or from the leaf surface into the leaf cells.absorption, active .Movement of ions and water into the plant root as a result of metabolic processes by the root, frequently against an activity gradient.acaricide . A pesticide that kills mites and ticks.accession .1). An addition (of a variety or strain) to a national or other register of varieties obtained by field collection or exchange.2). A variety, strain, or population registered at a research center and worth conserving.accession list. A reference list of a collection of cultivars, germplasm, or breeding lines that are stored or maintained.accession number .The identification number assigned to an accession.acclimation/acclimatization . Adjustment or adaptation of an individual to a different climate or environment.achene . Small, dry fruit with one seed.achlorophyllous . Lacking chlorophyll.acid equivalent (a.e.).The portion of pesticide that is theoretically converted into acid.acid soil. A soil with a pH value of less than 7.0; for practical purposes, soils with pH below 6.6.acid sulfate soil . A soil with a pH value of less than 4.0 when air-dried; contains a high amount of sulfate and yellow jarosite mottles. Abnormal growth of plants in this soil is due to (i) toxicity fromaluminum, iron, and hydrogen sulfide; and (ii) phosphorus deficiency.acquired characters . Phenotypic (see phenotype) changes produced on a plant by the environment during the plant's development. Such characters (defined) are uninheritable.actinomycetes .1). Bacteria with branching filaments.2). A nontaxonomic term applied to a group of organisms withcharacteristics intermediate between the simple bacteria and the true fungi. active collection. A breeder's term for a collection of germplasm that is used often and is maintained live.active ingredient (a.i.). The potent portion of a compound (such as fertilizer, insecticide, fungicide or herbicide applied on the soil or plant) used as basis to estimate the chemical effect. Useful for comparing the strength or toxicity of chemicals.active vegetative stage . The growth stage of plants when there is rapid development of leaves, tillers, branches, or stems.acuminate .Gradually tapering to a sharp, prolonged point (e.g., rice leaves).acute rodenticide . A poison for rodents that acts swiftly and causes death shortly after ingestion. An example is zinc phosphide.adapt .To fit or adjust to a particular environment or a set of specific climatic conditions through a change in the plant's growth and development.adaptability . The ability to adapt to different environments by modifications in physiological responses.adaptation . The process of becoming suited to new or different environmental conditions or for particular functions.adaptiveness .Degree of being adapted to a certain environment or environments.adaptive research . Research conducted to validate, modify, orcalibrate a new technology to specific soil, climate, socioeconomic, or environmental characteristics of a given area.adaxial. Upper. The side toward the axis. Ventral.additive effects of genes . The effects produced by the sum of more than one pair of genes to improve desirable characters or suppress undesirable characters of a plant.additive genes . Genes that have no dominance and the effect of each gene can be added to the phenotype.ADP .Adenosine-5'-diphosphate, a complex sugar-phosphorus compound formed as a result of expenditure of energy and the loss of a phosphate group from the energy-rich ATP (adenosine triphosphate) compounds.adsorption.1). The taking up of molecules or ions at a surface, including exchangeable cations and anions on soil particles.2). The sticking of a liquid, or gaseous or dissolved substance to a solid, resulting in higher concentration of the substance.adult . The mature stage.adult (Entomology).The mature stage of an insect which occurs after the nymphal or pupal stages. Adult insects usually have wings and mature sexual organs.adult plant resistance . Resistance manifested mainly in maturing plants and less apparent in the seedling stage.advanced generation .A generation later than the fourth or fifth after crossing. In general, most of the major genes are fixed at the advanced generation.Downloaded by Huang Hui from IRRI.- 3 -adventitious prop roots .Roots formed at the higher nodes above the soil surface.adventitious roots . Roots developing from the part of a plant other than roots, which are formed from nodes of the plant. After 10-20 days of growth, all roots of the rice plant are adventitious roots.aerenchyma . The lysigenous intercellular spaces in the parenchyma layer forming a system of air passages which ramifies through the leaves, stems, and roots of a rice plant.aerate . To impregnate with a gas, usually air.aerial branching at nodes (Br). New shoots which develop at nodes high on the culm following the cutting of panicles.aerial roots . Roots that grow above the ground from the nodes.aerial tillers . Tillers that grow above the ground level.aerobic . Growing only in the presence of molecular oxygen. Having molecular oxygen as part of the environment.aerobic digestion . The partial biological decomposition of suspended organic matter in waste water or sewage under aerated conditions.aeroponics . A technique in growing plants wherein the plants derive their nutrients and water from a mist of air and aqueous solution that come in contact with the roots.aestivation . The inactive or dormant state of a larva during summer.AFLP . Amplification fragment length polymorphism. A variant DNA amplification product of different size produced by DAF, PCR, or RAPD technique.African rice . Refers only to the cultivated O. glaberrima .agar . Mucilage derived from a seaweed. It forms a gel with water. It is used to solidify culture media on which microorganisms are grown.aged rice . Rice that is kept at least 4 mo after harvest. Expands more on cooking and less sticky than cooked, freshly harvested rice.agrarian system . A historically constituted and durable mode of exploitation of the environment; a technical system adapted to the bioclimatic conditions of a given area and which complies with its social conditions and needs at that moment.agricultural lime . A soil amendment consisting principally of calcium carbonate but including magnesium carbonate and perhaps other materials. This is used to furnish calcium and magnesium as elements for the growth of plants and to neutralize soil acidity.agricultural production system . The whole structured set of plants, animals, and activities selected by a farmer for his production unit to achieve its goals. It is a global system that is finalized by farmer socioeconomic objectives and related management strategy.agriculture . The practice of cultivation, farming, tillage and horticulture; plant and animal production.agroclimatic .Relating to the relationship between crop adaptation and climate.agroecological zones . Geographical mapping units based on climaticconditions and land forms that determine relatively homogeneous crop growing environments.agroeconomics . The economics of agriculture.agronomic characters . Plant characters related to crop production usually observed during plant growth; e.g., height, maturity, tiller number, panicle size, yield and quality factors.agronomy . 1). Science of agriculture that deals with all aspects offield crop production and soil management. 2). An applied ecological science.ahurice . An early rice similar to "Aus"; grown in Assam, India.albic horizon . A soil horizon from which clay and iron oxide have been removed (USDA, 1975).albino . A plant that lacks chlorophyll and turns white; a deficiency in normal pigment.aleurone layer .1).The peripheral layer of endosperm of the grainbeneath the seed coat which envelops the endosperm and contains oil and protein.2). It is a layer of high-protein cells surrounding the storage cells of the endosperm. Its function is tosecrete hydrolytic enzymes for digesting food reserves in the endosperm.alien gene . A gene transferred to the cultivated species from another related or unrelated species.aliquot . A small part or portion of a given amount (such as 5 ml out of 100 ml solution).alkali soil . A soil containing sufficient exchangeable sodium toadversely affect crop production. Its sodium adsorption ratio is greater than 15 and pH is > 8.5.alkali spreading value .The degree of spreading of six grains of milled rice in 10 ml 1.7% KOH for 23 h at room temperature or 30℃ using a seven-point score (7=completely spread, and 1=no reaction). Gelatinization temperature of starch is estimated based on spreading value: low (6-7); intermediate (4-5); intermediate-high (3); and high (1-2).alkaline . Having a pH higher than 7.alkaline soil . A soil with a pH value higher than 7.0; CaCO3 in the upper horizon from a few percent to 95%.alkalinity . The quality, state, or degree of being alkaline.allele . One of several possible mutational forms of a gene at a given genetic locus. One diploid individual can have a maximum of two forms (alleles), but there may be several alternate alleles in the species.allelemorph . In Mendelian inheritance, a pair of alternative forms of a gene in which one may be dominant and the other recessive.alleles, multiple . A series of alleles (more than 2) that affect the development of a character.alleles, pseudo .Alleles that are functionally similar but structurally different.Downloaded by Huang Hui from IRRI.- 4 -allelism . The relationship between alleles in different parents. When the alleles of two parents belong to the same gene (locus), they are allelic; otherwise, non-allelic.allelism test (complementation test).A test for determining whether changes occurred in the same gene so that complementation between genes is possible.allelochemicals .Nonnutritional substances produced by a plant that affect the behavior, growth, health, or physiology of another plant or insect.allelopathy . The phenomenon of suppressing the growth of one plant species by another through the release of a toxic substance.allogamous .Capable of cross fertilization or having cross-fertilizing nature.allogamy . Cross fertilization; opposite of autogamy.allomone . An allelochemical that causes negative effects on the recipient organism.alloploid/allopolyploid . A polyploid containing genetically different sets of chromosomes from two or more species, e.g., O. minuta with BBCC genomes is an allopolyploid.allozyme . see isozyme.alluvial fan . A fan or cone-shaped mass of sand and gravel deposited by a stream where it emerges from a narrow valley and spreads on to a plain or wide valley.alluvial . Pertaining to alluvium; a clayey, silty, sandy, or gravely material deposited by a stream or other bodies of running water.alluvial soil .Soil that has been deposited by any form of running water.alluvium . Mineral material (sand, silt, and clay) deposited by rivers.alternate host . An individual or plant other than the main or preferred host upon which a parasite (or its spores, eggs, larvae, etc.) or a disease organism (pathogen) could live.aman rice . A term used in Bangladesh and east India for lowland rice grown in the wet season during June to November.ambient air . Air that reflects surrounding environmental conditions.amensalism . An interaction between two organisms in which one organism is suppressed by toxins produced by the second.American wild rice .Not a species of rice. It is a wild grass found in the USA with grains similar to those of rice. Its scientific name is Zizania aquatica .amino acid .A substance with both basic and acidic properties synthesized by plants and animals; considered the building blocks of proteins.ammonia volatilization . The escape of nitrogen from the soil or floodwater as ammonia gas; causes loss of urea and the ammonium form of nitrogen fertilizer from floodwater or saturated soil surfaces. amphidiploid . 1). Said of plants resulting from a cross between twodifferent species and having the total chromosome complement of the parent species.2). Name given to allopolyploids which are produced when different genomes are combined through interspecific hybridization.amplicon .DNA region defined by two opposing primer amplification sites.amylase .The enzyme responsible for catalyzing the breakdown of starch into sugars; may be active in one of two forms: a-amylase and b-amylase.amylopectin . 1). A component of starch that has a high molecularweight, long-branched chain structures, and does not tend to gel in aqueous solutions.2). A type of starch molecule composed of long-branched chains of glucose units (a polysaccharide).3). The major and branched fraction of starch, aglucose polymer with 5,000--19,000 glucose units and mean chain length of 18-22 glucose units. Thisfraction contributes directly to gel consistency and has a long linear chain fraction in high amylose starch.amylose .1). In cereal endosperm, it is the starch fraction of moleculesor residues made up of glucose units, straight short chains (see nonwaxy endosperm).2). The essentially linear fraction of starch, a polymer of glucose (dextrose) with up to 1,000 glucose units. It gives a blue complex with iodine and contributes directly to cooked rice hardness. It is measured colorimetrically by its blue complex with iodine in acetate buffer.amylose content .The value representing the starch fraction of milled rice, or the amount of starch in the grain that determines its eating and cooking quality. Low-amylose rice varieties are moist, sticky, and glossy after cooking. Rice with a high amylose content cooks dry and fluffy.anaerobic holding system . A closed storage unit for partial digestion of liquid organic wastes in the absence of oxygen.anaerobic . The absence of molecular oxygen.analysis of variance (ANOVA or ANOV).1) A statistical procedure that allows subdivision of the total variation among experimental units into known sources of variation and provides a measure for each source. 2) The statistical analysis that tests the significance of variable sources.anaphase . The stage of cell division (mitosis and meiosis) in which the chromosome halves move toward the opposite poles of the spindle.anastomosis . A union of a hypha or vessel with another resulting in exchange of their contents. Fusion of hyphal cells of fungi involving the cell wall or cytoplasm.anatomy . Study of the internal structure of living beings.anatropous . Descriptive of an ovule in which the body is bent backward along the funiculus and adnate to it.androgenesis . The development of a haploid individual from a pollen grain or microspore.Downloaded by Huang Hui from IRRI.- 5 -anesthetize . To immobilize.aneuploid . An individual with a chromosome number that is not an exact multiple of the haploid chromosome complement.angiosperm . Flowering plant. One of a group of plants whose seeds are enclosed in a mature ovary (fruit).anisomeric genes . Several genes that have one-directional and unequal effects. Their expressivity and heritability are intermediate between those of major genes and polygenes.annealing . Formation of fully or partially double-stranded DNA molecules from complimentary single-stranded molecules.annual . Yearly; used for plants which complete their life cycle (seed to seed production and death) in 1 year or less.antagonism . In plant nutrition, the interference of one element with the absorption or utilization of an essential nutrient by plants.antagonistic symbiosis . A symbiotic association which is destructive to one of the symbionts or partners involved in the association.anteapical . Just near the apex.antenna (insects). A movable segmented appendage occurring in pairs on the head of an insect.antennal base . A fixed area around the point of origin of the antenna.antenodal . Any area before or preceding a node in an insect's wing.anther . The saclike structure of the male part (stamen) of a flower in which the pollen is formed. Anthers normally have two lobes or cavities that dehisce at anthesis and allow the pollen to disperse.anther/microspore culture .In vitro culture of anthers or microspores which allows the production of homozygous diploid (doubled haploid) plants.anthesis . The action or period of opening of a flower; the period of pollination, specifically the time when the stigma is ready to receive the dispersed pollen and fertilization takes place.anthocyanin .Any of a class of soluble glycoside pigments that are responsible for most of the blue to red colors in leaves, flowers, and other plant parts.anthraquic . Pertaining to an aquic soil moisture regime induced by human action such as bunding and leveling of land, or irrigation.antibiosis The antagonistic association between two organisms producing detrimental effects on one of them. It could also mean an association between one organism and a metabolic product of another.antibiotic .A chemical substance produced by certain microorganisms that retards or inhibits the growth of other microorganisms. Substance that acts to destroy or inhibit the growth of a microbe (e.g., bacteria or fungi).antibody . A protein produced in a warm-blooded animal in reaction to an injected foreign antigen and capable of reacting to that antigen.antidote . A remedy to counteract the toxic effects of a pesticide (e.g., atropine sulfate for carbamate and phosphate poisoning). antigen . Foreign protein and occasionally complex lipids,carbohydrates, and some nucleic acids, which upon injection into a warm-blooded animal, induce the production of antibodies.antisense . Strand of DNA or RNA complementary to the sense strand of a gene. Sense and antisense strands anneal in vivo and cause inactivation of the gene's expression.antiserum .The blood serum of a warm-blooded animal that contains antibodies.antixenosis . A term proposed by Kogan and Ortman to replace nonpreference. It conveys the idea that the plant is avoided as a bad host. A property of the plant that makes it not attractive to some feeding or ovipositing insects.AP-PCR . Single primer amplification method developed by Welsh and McClelland. Usually large single primers of 20-30 nucleotides are annealed to target DNA then amplified by PCR under nonstringent conditions for two cycles. Then stringency (i.e., temperature) is increased. Products are separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography.apiculate . Ending in a short-pointed tip.apiculus . A small extension of the lemma or palea.apomixis . An asexual method of reproduction in which the seed develops without the union of egg and sperm. The resulting embryos have the same genetic constitution as that of the seed parent.apospory . A form of apomixis in which the embryo develops from the somatic cells of the nucellus.appendage . Any external outgrowth of a plant that does not have any apparent essential function.application rate .The amount of fertilizer, insecticide, or herbicide applied per unit area or volume in experiments or commercial production.applied research .Research in which results can be used immediately by the farmer and can be applied to the peculiar problems of a country or a region.appressorium . The swollen tip of a hypha or germ tube that facilitates attachment and penetration of the host tissue by the fungus pathogen.aquatic plant. A plant that grows and develops in standing water and provides sufficient aeration to the parts under water.aquic . Pertaining to a soil moisture regime characterized by water saturation of the soil at all depths for a least a few weeks every year (USDA, 1975).aquorizem . Soil characterized by a distinct accumulation horizon of iron oxide and manganese oxide below the traffic pan, formed as result of wetland rice cultivation.areolate . Marked out into small spaces, reticulate.argillic horizon . A soil horizon enriched by clay that has moved downward (USDA, 1975).aridic .A soil moisture regime that limits plant growth during much of the growing season.Downloaded by Huang Hui from IRRI.- 6 -aril . An outer covering of the seed arising from the stalk of the ovule or below the hilum, the pulpy inner pod.armyworm . The larva of the family Noctuidae which often travels in large populations from field to field. The armyworm moths are ash to light brown, with mottled forewings that have irregular white or light gray spots near the extreme tip or with two pale semicircular spots in the middle. Adults migrate from the grassy areas or upland crops to ricefields and deposit their eggs. The larvae move in armies and may eat entire rice plants.aroma . A distinct smell or odor.artesian water . Groundwater confined under hydrostatic pressure.arthropods . Any member of phylum Arthropoda having segmented body, thick exoskeleton that is shed from time to time, a number of jointed appendages, i.e., legs, antennae, cerci, etc., and a nervous system with double ventral cord.artificial manure .Any form of nutrient source that is not of natural origin.artificial medium . A substance having an agar base with different chemicals or other constituents developed to replace the normal food or diet in rearing insects or pathogens.arthropod . Animals in the Arthropoda, a phylum consisting of animals with jointed limbs, e.g., the Insecta (insect) and Arachnida (mites and spiders).artificial diet . Food source, other than the natural host plant,consisting of amounts of various components which are mixed and provided to insects in the rearing program. The diet may be holidic (chemically pure), meridic (one or more chemically undefined materials such as wheat germ), or xenic (host plant materials plus supplemental nutrients).ascomycetes .A group of fungi producing their sexual spores within asci.ascospore . A sexually produced spore borne in an ascus.ascus . A saclike cell of a hypha in which meiosis occurs and which contains the ascospores, usually eight.asexual reproduction . Reproduction that does not involve fertilization or the fusion of sexually dissimilar gametes.ash, plant . The inorganic residue, principally oxides, which remains after the ignition of plant tissue.Asian rice . Oryza sativa L. The cultivated rice believed to have originated in Asia.assimilates . Building blocks of carbohydrates manufactured by the leaves of the rice plant.assimilation .1). The utilization of inorganic and organic substances incell synthesis.2). Uptake of CO 2 by a leaf or canopy during the day time or plant foods utilized in building up a protoplasm and cell walls of the plant.3). Computer modeling of the rice crop growth.asymmetrical . Parts not equal or symmetrically arranged.asynapsis .Failure of pairing of homologous chromosomes during meiosis.ATP . Adenosine triphosphate, a nucleotide consisting of adenine, ribose sugar, and three phosphate groups; the major source of usable chemical energy in metabolism. On hydrolysis, ATP loses onephosphate to become adenosine diphosphate (ADP), releasing usable energy.attack . 1). To cause growth retardation or an economic yield loss fromdisease, insect, bird or other pests.2). To try to solve a problem at its source.auchenorrhyncha . A suborder of Hemiptera in which the beakappears to rise from the inferior portion of the head and in which the tarsi have three tarsomeres.auricle .1). A pair of small ear-like appendages borne at the base of the leaf blade and usually arising at the sides where the ligule and the base of the collar are joined.2). An ear-shaped appendage, usually occurring at the junction of the leaf sheath and the blade that may not be present in older leaves.ausrice. A photoperiod-insensitive, rainfed, drought-prone, lowland, or upland rice, broadcast and transplanted during the early part of the wet season from March to September in Bangladesh and from April to August in east India.autoclave . An airtight chamber that can be filled with steam under pressure or surrounded by another chamber for the steam and that is used for sterilizing, cooking or other purposes requiring moist temperatures above 212 oF or 100 ℃ . Used for sterilization.autogamy . Fertilization arising from self-pollination.autoinfection . Infection of a host by a microorganism or virus produced within or upon the body of the same host individual.autopolyploid . A polyploid which possesses duplication of the same set of chromosomes, or more than two sets of chromosomes, coming from same species.autoradiogram . The photographic record of a chromatogram that contains radioactively labeled compounds. Prepared by exposing a sensitive photographic film to the radioactive radiation by placing it in contact with the chromatogram.autoradiography . A method used to detect radioactive substances by their property to darken film superimposed on the compounds. Can be used on whole organisms or molecules separated by molecular methods such as electrophoresis.autosomes . Chromosomes not associated with sex of the bearer.autotroph .A cell or organism that manufactures its own food from CO2 and other small inorganic compounds by the process of photosynthesis.auxins . A group of growth regulators or plant hormones (natural or synthetic) that may stimulate cell growth and induce cell elongation or division; often induce adventitious roots, root development, and other growth processes including seed germination.available nutrient . An element in the soil which can be readily absorbed and assimilated by growing plants.。

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