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BREEDING FOR SUGARCANE SMUT RESISTANCE IN AUSTRALIA AND INDUSTRY RESPONSE: 2006�2011
By SA BHUIYAN; BJ CROFT; MC COX
BSES LIMITED COMMENCED screening Australian varieties for resistance to sugarcane
smut in Indonesia in 1998, a few months after the disease was found in the Ord River
Irrigation Area (ORIA) of Western Australia. Data from these screening programs
provided important information on susceptibility of Australian commercial varieties to
smut. After detection of smut in Queensland in 2006, BSES launched a large smutscreening program to accelerate the development of resistant varieties. Since then,
approximately 10,000 clones from various stages of selection programs have been
screened for smut-resistance. The proportion of resistant clones in the BSES breeding
program increased from 40% to 68% since 2007. A strategy was developed to increase
the number of resistant clones in the breeding program by not making crosses with a
mid-parent smut rating greater than 6.5. The replacement of smut-susceptible varieties
by resistant and intermediate varieties in commercial production increased significantly
in all regions except New South Wales. The regional increase in production from
resistant and intermediate varieties was 24% to 64% in Northern, <10% to 75% in
Herbert, 65% to 95% in Burdekin, 25% to 72% in Central, and 21% to 81% in Southern
regions. Four smut-resistant to intermediate varieties are dominant in most of the
Queensland cane growing areas, accounting for approximately 70% of harvest. They are Q208A (28%), KQ228A (18%), Q200A (10%) and Q183A (9.5%). Already a large
number of new smut-resistant productive varieties are available to the industry, and
these should help to minimise the losses of production due to sugarcane smut.