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Dive into the research topics where Dean Spaner is active.

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Featured researches published by Dean Spaner.


Euphytica | 2004

The association of culm anatomy with lodging susceptibility in modern spring wheat genotypes

A.J. Kelbert; Dean Spaner; K. G. Briggs; Jane R. King

Selection for lodging resistant cultivars in cereal breeding programs is difficult due to the challenge of screening for this trait under natural field conditions. The identification of easily measurable culm traits related to lodging resistance would simplify the selection process. The present study was conducted to determine if differences in culm anatomy exist among modern wheat genotypes differing in lodging susceptibility, and to determine the association between culm characters and lodging. From a 2-year field study conducted in Edmonton, Alberta, 13 spring wheat cultivars were chosen based on predetermined susceptibility to artificially induced lodging. Morphological and anatomical culm measurements were made visually and with an environmental scanning electron microscope. Genotypes differed (P < 0.05) for plant height, number of internodes per culm, basal internode length and diameter, culm wall thickness and the number of vascular bundles, but not for adventitious root frequency, lumen diameter or sclerenchyma ring thickness. Mean genotype field scores for artificially induced lodging were correlated (P < 0.05) with plant height (r= 0.51) and the length of the fourth basal internode (r= 0.51). Short, wide basal internodes and thick culm walls were characteristic of three lodging tolerant genotypes: Kohika, Sapphire and Olso. Nevertheless, despite such apparent genotype specific association between culm anatomy and field lodging, general applicable associations were not observed for most traits. The most practical and easily selectable trait for lodging resistance within a wheat breeding program remains plant height.


Euphytica | 2009

Characterization of the effect of a QTL for drought resistance in rice, qtl12.1, over a range of environments in the Philippines and eastern India

Jérôme Bernier; Arvind Kumar; Ramaiah Venuprasad; Dean Spaner; Satish Verulkar; Nimai Prasad Mandal; Pramod K. Sinha; Puvvada Peeraju; Praba R. Dongre; R. N. Mahto; Gary N. Atlin

A large-effect QTL for grain yield under drought conditions (qtl12.1) was reported in a rice mapping population derived from Vandana and Way Rarem. Here, we measured the effect of qtl12.1 on grain yield and associated traits in 21 field trials: ten at IRRI in the Philippines and 11 in the target environment of eastern India. The relative effect of the QTL on grain yield increased with increasing intensity of drought stress, from having no effect under well-watered conditions to having an additive effect of more than 40% of the trial mean in the most severe stress treatments. The QTL improved grain yield in nine out of ten direct-seeded upland trials where drought stress was severe or moderate, but no effect was measured under well-watered aerobic conditions or under transplanted lowland conditions. These trials confirm that qtl12.1 has a large and consistent effect on grain yield under upland drought stress conditions, in a wide range of environments.


Canadian Entomologist | 2011

Biology and Integrated Management of Wheat Stem Sawfly and the Need for Continuing Research

Brian L. Beres; Lloyd M. Dosdall; David K. Weaver; H. A. Cárcamo; Dean Spaner

Abstract The wheat stem sawfly, Cephus cinctus Norton (Hymenoptera: Cephidae), is historically one of the most important economic insect pests in the northern Great Plains of North America. Within this geographical region, the areas subjected to greatest attack are southern Alberta and Saskatchewan, southwestern Manitoba, eastern and northern Montana, North Dakota, northern South Dakota, and western Minnesota. Cumulative grain-yield losses and annual economic losses associated with this pest can exceed 30% and


The Journal of Agricultural Science | 2008

Competitive traits and the stability of wheat cultivars in differing natural weed environments on the northern Canadian Prairies

Heather E. Mason; Laksiri A. Goonewardene; Dean Spaner

350 million, respectively. Solid-stemmed cultivars of common wheat, Triticum aestivum L. (Poaceae), tolerant of infestation, are critical for C. cinctus management, but outbreaks of this pest continue to occur even after six decades of cultivar development. Furthermore, chemical control (a primary control option for other cereal (Poaceae) insect pests) has proven ineffective; this underscores the need to integrate resistant cultivars into a comprehensive integrated pest management program. We provide overviews of wheat stem sawfly biology, recent advances in applied research, the efficacy and integration of cultural and biological management strategies, and future directions for global research activities to manage wheat stem sawfly.


Agronomy for Sustainable Development | 2008

Organic and conventional management of mixtures of wheat and spring cereals

A. H. E. E. Kaut; Heather E. Mason; Alireza Navabi; J. T. O’Donovan; Dean Spaner

Nine spring wheat cultivars, selected on the basis of height, tillering capacity and maturity, were grown in differing levels of natural weed presence at three locations in Edmonton and New Norway, Alberta between 2003 and 2004. The objectives of the study were to (1) identify competitive traits in wheat cultivars, (2) determine whether traits associated with competitive ability differ under increasing weed pressure and (3) assess cultivar stability in and adaptation to environments differing in yield potential and weed competition. Eight experimental environments (including conventionally and organically managed fields with and without common oats sown as a weed analogue) were grouped into low, medium and high weed pressure levels, based on mean total weed biomass. Tallness and early heading and maturity were related to increased grain yield at the highest weed level. Greater spikes/m 2 , tallness and early heading were associated with reduced weed biomass, depending on weed level. Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed that height accounted for a small amount of variation in low weed environments, yet was more important as weed pressure increased. Finlay-Wilkinson (Finlay & Wilkinson 1963) stability analysis demonstrated that cultivars responded differently in environments differing in yield potential and in weed pressure. Older wheat cultivars were generally more yield-stable across environments, while modern semidwarf cultivars were more sensitive to changes in weed level. The cultivar Park (released in 1963) was the most yield-and weed-stable cultivar, coupled with relatively high yields and average weed biomass accumulation, and may therefore be well adapted to low yielding or high weed environments.


The Journal of Agricultural Science | 2009

Performance and stability of performance of spring wheat variety mixtures in organic and conventional management systems in western Canada

A. H. E. E. Kaut; Heather E. Mason; Alireza Navabi; John T. O'Donovan; Dean Spaner

Cereal mixtures may provide both organic and conventional producers with a more sustainable approach in reducing weed pressure, crop rotation flexibility, improved yield stability, buffering against pests and diseases, minimizing soil variability and increasing animal feed value. We examined the response of small grain mixtures containing wheat, oats, barley and triticale to varying degrees of natural competition and environmental stress at three locations in central Alberta, Canada. One modern and one heritage hard-red spring wheat cultivar, along with one cultivar each of oats, barley and triticale and eighteen two-way mixtures, were planted on organic and conventional land at seven location-years between 2003 and 2005. Average yields were 30% to 70% lower on organically managed sites. Monocrop barley yielded 43% and 16% higher than the site average at two organic locations. Our results suggest two main conclusions: (1) on conventionally managed land, wheat-barley mixtures exhibited potential for yield maintenance and weed suppression, and; (2) on organically managed land, competition with weeds had a large negative effect on yield (>30%). The 25:75 mixtures of wheat and oats, and all mixtures of Park (a heritage) wheat and Manny barley exhibited yield potential similar to or (up to 1.0 t ha−1) greater than monocrop yield. Manny barley mixtures exhibited weed suppressive capabilities.


Journal of Sustainable Agriculture | 2007

Agrobiodiversity: Its Value, Measurement, and Conservation in the Context of Sustainable Agriculture

Brian E. Love; Dean Spaner

Wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) variety mixtures represent a relatively unexplored avenue for maintaining and stabilizing yield for both organic and conventional producers. The present study examined the responses of three Canadian western red spring wheat varieties in sole crop and in variety mixtures to varying levels of simulated and natural competition, as well as environmental stress at one conventionally and two organically managed locations in central Alberta, Canada, between 2003 and 2005. Three modern hard red spring wheat varieties (Superb, semi-dwarf; AC Intrepid, early maturing and 5600HR, tall), along with 13 two- and three-way variety mixtures, were planted under two levels of simulated weed ( Brassica juncea L.) competition at each of the eight location-years. The B. juncea weed competition treatment decreased yields at all locations. Overall yield was lowest at the certified organic farm and highest under conventional management. Sole-crop semi-dwarf Superb and all three Superb–Intrepid mixture entries consistently yielded among the highest, regardless of management system, testing location or competition treatment. The 1:1 and 1:2 Superb–Intrepid mixture entries were the most stable of all entries tested. Early season vigour was strongly associated with yield, with the strongest correlation occurring under low-moisture, low-nutrient, high-competition conditions at the certified organic farm. Spring wheat variety mixtures may provide greater stability with little or no reduction in yield, while providing greater competitive ability.


Journal of Sustainable Forestry | 2005

A Survey of Small-Scale Farmers Using Trees in Pastures in Herrera Province, Panama

Brian Love; Dean Spaner

ABSTRACT Conservation of agrobiodiversity is an important component of sustainable agriculture and is important internationally. Ex situ conservation in genebanks has been the dominant strategy. Recently, in situ conservation has been advocated as a complementary strategy. This review (1) defines the context of agrobiodiversity conservation, (2) discusses its value and measurement, (3) explores the advantages and disadvantages of ex situ and in situ conservation approaches, and (4) outlines the importance of seed exchange and ethical concerns.


Canadian Journal of Plant Science | 2006

The relationship between lodging and plant height in a diverse wheat population

Alireza Navabi; Muhammad Iqbal; Klaus Strenzke; Dean Spaner

Abstract Herrera province in Panama has suffered extensive deforestation due to cattle ranching. Scientific knowledge of tree species use in Herreran pastures is limited and baseline information is necessary for the development of viable silvopastoral systems. The present study employed surveys to describe the current use of trees in Herreran pastures. The Ministry of Agricultural and Livestock Development (MIDA) and Panama Peace Corps identified eight informants who were interviewed in order to develop a semi-structured interview. The developed interview was then administered to 45 randomly selected small-scale (< 20 hec) Herreran pasture owners, with stratification by informant gender and farm ecozone. Nine different tree uses were identified. There were differences in the popularity and perceived species richness of these uses. Sørensonss similarity index indicated that percent similarity between uses ranged from 0-51%. Abundance-diversity curves for uses were steep with only a few dominant species. Native species (e.g., Byrsonima crassifolia, Guazuma ulmifolia, Cordia alliodora) tended to receive the highest multipurpose tree priority ratings. Protein banks were not used and are likely inappropriate for most small-scale farmers. However, fodder trees (e.g., Guazuma ulmifolia, Enterolobium cyclocarpum) were often retained in pastures and agricultural by-products (stover, immature fruits) were commonly used as feed supplements. Trees provide a number of products and services in Herreran pastures and require further research, with special attention to native species.


Archive | 2011

Integrating the building blocks of agronomy and biocontrol into an IPM strategy for wheat stem sawfly

Brian L. Beres; Héctor A. Cárcamo; David Weaver; Lloyd M. Dosdall; Maya L. Evenden; Bernard D. Hill; R. H. McKenzie; Rong-Cai Yang; Dean Spaner

We examined the genetic variation for lodging tolerance in different plant height groups, within a diverse population of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) genotypes (n = 14 0). Lodging was artificially induced by dragging a weighted apparatus across plots twice during the season at early and late milk stages. Grain yield was negatively correlated with lodging, while lodging scores were positively correlated with plant height. Although plant height appeared to be the major contributor to lodging tolerance, some variation was also observed in taller plants. This suggests that genetic gain in lodging tolerance can be obtained, to some extent, independent of plant height. Key words: Plant height, lodging tolerance, Triticum aestivum L., CIMMYT, Canada

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Harpinder Randhawa

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Curtis J. Pozniak

University of Saskatchewan

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Brian L. Beres

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Muhammad Iqbal

National Agricultural Research Centre

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Hua Chen

University of Alberta

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John T. O'Donovan

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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