Abstract:
Three pot culture experiments were carried out in the field at Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural
University, Dhaka, Bangladesh during aman seasons of 2012 - 2014 to study the response of
different rice genotypes under varying submergence durations and to identify the morphological,
physiological and anatomical characters those contribute to submergence tolerance and to study
the variations among the selected rice genotypes. The experiments were conducted with three
tolerant (BRRI dhan52, IR64Sub1, FR13A) and one susceptible genotype (BR5) with four
submergence treatments (0, 7, 14, and 21 days of submergence). All experiments were laid out in
two factors RCBD with four replications. Different morphological and physiological processes
were hampered due to submergence and there existed genotypic variations also. The lower stem
elongation and less affected root dry matter help plants to survive under submergence condition.
After desubmergence, tiller number, stomatal conductance, net assimilation rate, relative growth
rate and absolute grain growth rate were less affected which helped BRRI dhan52 and FR13A to
perform better. Different yield components such as number of panicles per plant, number of
filled grain per plant, filled grain weight per plant and 100-grain weight were also less affected in
BRRI dhan52 and FR13A compared to other two genotypes (IR64Sub1 and BR5). The results
indicated that 7DS treatment in BRRI dhan52 produced more or less similar (99%) yield as
compared to control which was followed by FR13A(81% of the control). Decreased grain yield
per plant under submergence treatment was observed due to reduction in tiller number rather
than grain weight per panicle. Larger aerenchyma formation, stronger arrangement of
parenchyma, lower membrane leakage, higher proline content, higher stem carbohydrate and
lower chlorophyll depletion in BRRI dhan52 and FR13A provided better adaptation capabilities
of these genotypes under submergence condition. But in BR5, though the proline content was
higher just after desubmergence, the injury label was much higher in this genotype and cells lost
their normal physiological functions. Lower chlorophyll a/b ratio in BRRI dhan52 and FR13A
indicated that chlorophyll a content was more affected and chlorophyll b content was less
affected due to submergence. The genotype BRRI dhan52 showed more submergence tolerance
compared to the other genotypes.
Description:
A Thesis
Submitted to the Faculty of Agriculture
Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University, Dhaka,
In partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
IN
AGRICULTURAL BOTANY
SEMESTER: July-December, 2015