Domesticated pennycress is a self-pollinated crop

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Domesticated pennycress is a self-pollinated crop

Authors

Lavaire, T.; McLaughlin, D.; Liu, S.; Kennedy, R.; Sauer, T.; Chopra, R.; Cook, K.

Abstract

CoverCress is a new winter annual oilseed crop developed from field pennycress within the past 20 years. Field pennycress is commonly considered to be self-pollinated but little basic research has been published and there is some misalignment of conclusions. Our experience working with pennycress plant growth in greenhouse and field conditions over the past 13 years suggests that outcrossing is uncommon. We conducted lab, greenhouse, and field experiments to strengthen the body of work. Pollen viability kinetics analysis showed that longevity of pollen viability is negatively impacted by increasing temperatures and by direct exposure to light. Samples treated at 4C declined to 50% viability in 12 hours while it took just 2.5 hrs at 37C, and 1.6 hrs in full sunlight on a cool early April day. Cross-pollination was absent among greenhouse-grown plants flowering inside an agitated plastic pollen-containment covering. Across greenhouse tests, high rates of cross-pollination occurred only in an emasculation treatment that rendered flowers male sterile and opened the pistil to cross-fertilization. Field trials designed to measure pollen flow distance using a trackable fae1 knockout reporter gene failed to show detectable movement of pollen under field conditions in two locations. This data strongly suggests that domesticated field pennycress may be considered a self-pollinated crop and managed as such.

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