T.V. Prasad
Indian Council of Agricultural Research
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Featured researches published by T.V. Prasad.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Sundeep Kumar; Sunil Archak; R. K. Tyagi; Jagdish Kumar; V. K. Vikas; Sherry Rachel Jacob; Kalyani Srinivasan; J. Radhamani; R. Parimalan; M. Sivaswamy; Sandhya Tyagi; M. P. Yadav; Jyotisna Kumari; Deepali; Sandeep Sharma; Indoo Bhagat; Madhu Meeta; N. S. Bains; A. K. Chowdhury; B. C. Saha; Patrali Bhattacharya; Jyoti Kumari; Mohar Singh; O. P. Gangwar; Pramod Prasad; S. C. Bharadwaj; Robin Gogoi; J. B. Sharma; Sandeep Kumar Gm; M. S. Saharan
A comprehensive germplasm evaluation study of wheat accessions conserved in the Indian National Genebank was conducted to identify sources of rust and spot blotch resistance. Genebank accessions comprising three species of wheat–Triticum aestivum, T. durum and T. dicoccum were screened sequentially at multiple disease hotspots, during the 2011–14 crop seasons, carrying only resistant accessions to the next step of evaluation. Wheat accessions which were found to be resistant in the field were then assayed for seedling resistance and profiled using molecular markers. In the primary evaluation, 19,460 accessions were screened at Wellington (Tamil Nadu), a hotspot for wheat rusts. We identified 4925 accessions to be resistant and these were further evaluated at Gurdaspur (Punjab), a hotspot for stripe rust and at Cooch Behar (West Bengal), a hotspot for spot blotch. The second round evaluation identified 498 accessions potentially resistant to multiple rusts and 868 accessions potentially resistant to spot blotch. Evaluation of rust resistant accessions for seedling resistance against seven virulent pathotypes of three rusts under artificial epiphytotic conditions identified 137 accessions potentially resistant to multiple rusts. Molecular analysis to identify different combinations of genetic loci imparting resistance to leaf rust, stem rust, stripe rust and spot blotch using linked molecular markers, identified 45 wheat accessions containing known resistance genes against all three rusts as well as a QTL for spot blotch resistance. The resistant germplasm accessions, particularly against stripe rust, identified in this study can be excellent potential candidates to be employed for breeding resistance into the background of high yielding wheat cultivars through conventional or molecular breeding approaches, and are expected to contribute toward food security at national and global levels.
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution | 2017
K.K. Gangopadhyay; Ashish Singh; Manas Kumar Bag; Pragya Ranjan; T.V. Prasad; Anirban Roy; Mitra Dutta
The wild species in general is considered to be the reservoir of genes especially for biotic and abiotic stresses. In okra, the predominant biotic stresses are yellow vein mosaic disease (YVMD), shoot and fruit borer and leaf hopper. Sixty eight (68) accessions belonging to four wild Abelmoschus species [Abelmoschus caillei (A. Chev.) Stevels, Abelmoschus manihot (L.) Medik., Abelmoschus moschatus (L.) Medik. and Abelmoschus tuberculatus Pal et Singh] and eight okra varieties were characterized and evaluated for phenological characters including biotic stresses under natural epiphytotic condition. The wild species examined consisted of 18 accessions (16 exotic and 2 indigenous) of A. caillei, 29 accessions of A. manihot, 16 accessions of A. moschatus and 5 accessions of A. tuberculatus. All the wild Abelmoschus species exhibited high diversity (as measured by Shannon Diversity Index) for 3 qualitative characters viz. intensity of stem colour, leaf shape, epicalyx shape, 13 quantitative characters and 3 biotic stress parameters. Among the wild species, A. caillei and A. tuberculatus showed maximum and minimum diversity for qualitative characters, respectively. There was significant variation for 19 out of 24 quantitative characters studied. Inter-species diversity pattern as estimated through Ward’s Minimum Variance Dendrogram and Principal Component Analysis revealed clear differentiation among the species with minimum overlapping indicating close association between geographical origins and clustering pattern. Intra-species diversity indicated role of specific adaptation in sub-clustering. Resistance to YVMD was found in accessions belonging to three wild species viz. A. caillei, A. manihot and A. moschatus while resistance to shoot and fruit borer and leaf hopper was found in accessions of all the four wild species. The resistant accessions can further be used for introgressing biotic stress resistance through pre-breeding into cultivated okra species.
Journal of Food Composition and Analysis | 2012
M. Arivalagan; K.K. Gangopadhyay; Gunjeet Kumar; Rakesh Bhardwaj; T.V. Prasad; S.K. Sarkar; Anirban Roy
Indian Journal of Virology | 2013
Anirban Roy; P. Spoorthi; G. Panwar; Manas Kumar Bag; T.V. Prasad; Gunjeet Kumar; K.K. Gangopadhyay; Manoranjan Dutta
Crop Protection | 2014
Manas Kumar Bag; N. K. Gautam; T.V. Prasad; Subhash C. Pandey; Manoranjan Dutta; Anirban Roy
Indian Journal of Horticulture | 2014
T.V. Prasad; Rakesh Bhardwaj; K.K. Gangopadhyay; M. Arivalagan; M.K. Bag; B.L. Meena; M. Dutta
Vegetos | 2012
Kuldeep Tripathi; Shashi Bhalla; T.V. Prasad; Kalyani Sriniwasan
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, India Section B: Biological Sciences | 2017
Rashmi Yadav; Ranbir Singh; Sandeep Kumar; T.V. Prasad; Rakesh Bharadwaj; Vikender Kaur; Anitha Petapadi; Ashok Kumar
Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences | 2016
Kuldeep Tripathi; Sarita Chauhan; Pg Gore; T.V. Prasad; Ishwari Singh Bisht; Shashi Bhalla
Legume Research | 2015
Kuldeep Tripathi; Sumit Kumar Chauhan; Padmawati G. Gore; T.V. Prasad; Kalyani Srinivasan; Shashi Bhalla