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2.1 Background Analysis

The optimum temperature for rice germination is between 28 and 30 °C. High temperature affects almost all growth stages of rice from germination to ripening (Shah et al. 2011). The threshold temperature at the seedling stage has been identified as 35 °C; the main symptom of heat stress is poor growth (Yoshida 1981).

Prasanth et al. (2012) tested heat stress in different stages of plant and used 28 genotypes including three mutant lines. These authors noted genotype-specific response with regards to heat stress tolerance in the three different stage analysed: germination, seedling and early vegetative stage. They added that there are fewer reports on the effect of high temperature on germination and vegetative stage of rice seedlings compared to the reproductive stage.

Plant reproductive processes are complex and sensitive to environmental changes, including high temperatures, which ultimately affect fertilization and post-fertilization processes leading to decreased yields. Flowering is one of the most susceptible stages in the life cycle of rice, and rice spikelets at anthesis exposed to more than 35 °C for 4–5 days induces sterility, with no seed produced (Satake and Yoshida 1978). Temperatures above 35 °C at flowering causes failure of anther dehiscence, and thus less pollen, resulting in incomplete fertilization in rice (Jagadish et al. 2007; Prasad et al. 2006; Satake and Yoshida 1978). Weerakoon et al. (2008) using a combination of high temperatures (32–36 °C ) with low (60%) and high (85%) relative humidity recorded high spikelet sterility. Flowering (meiosis, anthesis and fertilization) is considered to be one of the most sensitive stages for temperature stress in rice. The threshold temperature for success in flowering in rice is 33 °C (Jagadish et al. 2007). Therefore, the fertility of spikelets at high temperature can be used as a screening tool for high temperature tolerance (Satake and Yoshida 1978). Some cultivars that are not so sensitive to higher temperatures, e.g. cv. N22, can be used in breeding programmes as controls in screening tests. Besides spikelet fertility occurring during the flowering stage, a phenotypic marker for male gametogenesis has been reported as a screening tool for high temperature stress in rice (Jagadish et al. 2014). Authors identified a distance of 8–9 cm between the collar of the last fully opened leaf and the flag leaf collar as the environmentally stable phenotypic marker to assess heat stress (38 °C) sensitivity at the micro sporogenesis stage leading to high spikelet sterility in rice.

Wei-hun et al. (2012) applied heat stress at 15 day-old seedling stage 43 °C/30 °C (day/night and 14 h/10 h), 75% relative humidity for 7 days and observed that plant height, root length, shoot and root biomass were dramatically reduced, with heat tolerant genotypes being relatively less affected than sensitive ones. In this sense, we have included seedlings as a target for heat tolerance screening, to enable selection at the seedling stage by plant breeders. This method, as described in Sect. 2.2, is based on growing rice seedlings in glasshouse conditions using hydroponics or pots and exposing them to heat stress in a growth chamber. The seedling test is simple and rapid (4–6 days) and allows the simultaneous screening of several hundred seedlings at once depending on the size of available infrastructure. A list of equipment required for hydroponics hardware and stock solutions is given. Heat stress treatment was applied after 15 days of seedling transplantation to hydroponics or pots. Germplasm classifications for sensitive, intermediate and tolerant are also provided. Visual symptoms of heat stress include: reduced leaf area, yellowing of leaves, leaf tip burning, and entire leaf burning and leaf death. Assessment of seedlings was done according to a heat tolerance index, which is calculated for seedling biomass data using shoot, root, whole seedlings weight (fresh and dry), root, shoot length and seedling height. The test can be adapted to screen M2 individuals as well as M3 families from mutant populations (and other large breeding populations). A stress tolerance index (STI, Fernandez 1992) was used to identify/validate genotypes producing high yield under both stress and non-stress conditions; Blum (1988) stated that selection based on STI can result in genotypes with higher stress tolerance and yield potential to be selected.

Tenorio et al. (2013) and Rang et al. (2011) developed a phenotyping protocol for use in plant breeding in which a temperature treatment of 38 °C is used at the flowering stage. Our second protocol presented here is to screen for heat tolerance in rice at the flowering stage modified from Tenorio et al. (2013) and Rang et al. (2011). Flowering is most heat sensitive stage that can result in high sterility and yield loss in rice. As explained in Sect. 2.3, glasshouse grown plants are moved to a controlled environmental from the first day of anthesis for heat stress treatments, at 35.0–39.0 °C/28 °C for 6–4/18–20 h with relative humidity 80% for 6–4 days. After heat treatment plants may be rescued and returned to glasshouse under optimum temperature conditions to produce seed and for further evaluation. Spikelet fertility (seed set) is measured as an important predictive parameter for yield (Prasad et al. 2006; Rang et al. 2011). In our protocol also we used spikelet fertility at maturity to assess the heat tolerance of the tested genotypes.

2.2 Screening Protocol for Heat Tolerance in Rice at the Seedling Stage

2.2.1 Plant Materials

Experiments were performed using controlled environment facilitates, test plant materials were compared to standard genotypes of known heat stress tolerance. Rice controls used at the PBGL (Austria), India, UR Tanzania and Pakistan are:

N22: a heat tolerant mutant, India origin

IR64: an intermediate heat tolerant genotype, from IRRI, Philippines

IR52: a heat susceptible genotype, from IRRI, Philippines

WAB 56-104: a heat susceptible genotype, Nigeria origin

The heat tolerance of the above standards in hydroponics and pots has been correlated with field performance, see Sect. 3.3. These standard materials can be requested free of charge from IRRI under a Standard Material Transfer Agreement. It is advisable to include local cultivars or breeding lines of known heat stress tolerance in tests.

2.2.2 Screening for Heat Tolerance Using Hydroponics

The equipment for hydroponics, the preparation of nutrient stock solutions and setting up of the hydroponics system are given in Bado et al. (2016).

2.2.2.1 Seedling Establishment in Hydroponics

The seedling establishment was conducted in a glasshouse set up for rice: 28/20 °C and 70% humidity in 16 h photoperiod. Test tanks were filled with distilled water until the water level is about 1 mm above the mesh of the platform. Dry seed were then placed into the wet compartments of the seed support platform. For M2 screening 20–40 seeds from one panicle is placed into one compartment (6 × 7 cm) (Fig. 2.1a). For M3 and advanced lines/cultivars 3–5 seeds were placed into each 2 cm diameter compartment. Individual lines may be replicated within and among tanks (Fig. 2.1b). The test platforms were then covered with a lid for 5–6 days to promote germination in the dark. On day 3, the seed should show signs of germination (emergence of root and shoot) and the water should be replaced with half-strength Yoshida solution as vigorous seedlings require nutrients. Germinated seeds were allowed to grow for 6 days. The seedlings for subsequent heat stress treatment should be healthy, therefore odd-looking or diseased seedlings should be removed at this stage. If seed samples are not clean and rotting occurs during germination, these must also be removed. If symptoms are widespread, a new batch of seedlings and fresh hydroponics materials should be prepared.

Fig. 2.1
figure 1

Germination and seedling establishment for heat stress treatment in hydroponics. (a) Seed support platform with rice seeds ready for germination, each compartment contains seed from one panicle per M2 plant. (b) M3/M4 advanced line seed support platform showing rice seeds ready for germination, each compartment contains 3–5 seeds from each line. After germination reduced to one seedling for each compartment (c) Rice seedlings are ready for heat application. (d) After heat treatment, rice seedlings showing various degrees of heat injury, some rows all died (last two rows), some could show tolerance with less damage. (Pictures from PBGL, Joint FAO/IAEA Division)

2.2.2.2 Care Required During Plant Growth in Hydroponics

Due to evaporation from tanks and transpiration from plants there will be a gradual decrease in solution volumes over time. Every 2 days the volume needs to be brought back to the level of full capacity (touching the netting in the platform compartments) and the pH adjusted to 5. If algal contamination is found, the nutrient solution should be completely replaced. Solutions can be changed by lifting off the platforms and placing them temporarily over empty tanks and pouring the hydroponics solutions back into a drum where the bulked solution can be pH adjusted for the whole experiment in one step. Once adjusted the solution is re-distributed into the test tanks and the seedling platforms returned. These operations also act to aerate the hydroponics solution. Alternatively, the pH can be adjusted on an individual tank basis and more working solution may be added to make up the volume in each tank.

2.2.3 Screening for Heat Tolerance in Soil Using Pots

No special equipment is needed for screening with soil in pots and/or trays. Plastic pots, trays or tanks are filled with a clay soil which has a good water retention capacity and organic matter content. Pre-germinated, 6 day-old young healthy seedlings are transferred to the plastic pots, trays or tanks as given in Fig. 2.2a–c. Also as shown in Fig. 2.4d, in case germination problems, an excess (110–120) of seeds of each line are sown directly into the tray to have 100 seedlings in a tray 1 week after sowing.

Fig. 2.2
figure 2

Germination and seedling establishment for heat stress in trays. (a) Pre-germinated rice seedlings in petri dishes with filter paper. (b) Young seedlings transplanted into trays. (c) 15 days after transplantation seedlings are ready for heat treatment (d) 45 °C heat application in growth chamber (Pictures are from Sokoine University, URT)

Germinated 6 day-old seedlings were transferred to pots or trays to grown in a glasshouse set up for rice: 28/20 °C day/night temperatures with 70% humidity and 16 h period. The glasshouse should be disease free and well-lit by natural or artificial lighting. Standard rice management practices are applied to pots with respect to soil, fertilizer and watering until the application of heat stress.

2.2.4 Heat Treatment and Recovery of Seedlings

Fifteen days after transplantation, seedlings were transferred to the growth chamber to grow under tightly controlled temperature, light and relative humidity conditions. Growth chambers were adjusted to 45 °C/28 °C (day/night) 6/18 h with 80% relative humidity. The temperature treatment was imposed for 4–6 days; depending on seedling tolerance to heat stress application (some of them already died after 4 days). For all genotypes including control cultivars, 50/100 seedlings were exposed to heat stress and same amount of seedlings are grown in glasshouse conditions without stress as controls (Figs. 2.3 and 2.4).

Fig. 2.3
figure 3

Heat treatment to seedlings in trays/hydroponics, each tray contains 100 seedlings in control and stress conditions (a and c) Control seedlings no heat stress applied, (b) After heat stress treatment, heat stress effects on seedlings most of the genotypes already dead, one to two lines alive seems tolerant to heat stress (d) Seedlings in hydroponics ready for heat stress application, each tank contains 100 seedlings. Right side: hydroponically grown seedlings showing various degrees of heat injury, left side: control plants showing normal, good growth and health (Pictures from PBGL, Joint FAO/IAEA Division b and Sokoine University in URT)

Fig. 2.4
figure 4

Effects of heat stress application on seedlings. (a) After heat stress application some seedlings have survived and some have not. (b) All seedlings have died these lines are very sensitive to heat. (c) Only one to two seedling has survived and can be selected for multiplication. (d) Control (non-heat stress) healthy seedlings in hydroponics. (e) Heat stressed seedlings in hydroponics with injury to leaves some of them bad injured non tolerant to heat. (f) Control (non-heat applied) seedlings roots without damage. (g) After heat stress application, damage can be seen on roots of rice seedlings, bad injured leaves seedlings also have bad injured roots (Pictures from PBGL, Joint FAO/IAEA Division and Sokoine University, URT)

2.2.5 Assessment of Heat Tolerance at the Seedling Stage

Heat application to rice seedlings is illustrated in Fig. 2.5; visual symptoms of heat stress are: leaf yellowing, reduced leaf area, leaf tip burning, and entire leaf burning and leaf death. The biomass of seedlings is recorded as given Table 2.1 using shoot/root/whole seedlings weight (fresh and dry), root, and shoot length and seedling height data. The performance of test lines/cultivars/controls are compared to the standards (controls), e.g. heat tolerant cv. N22, moderate tolerant cv. IR64 and/or sensitive cultivars IR 52, and/or WAB 56 104. Most of lines showed poor growth or death at temperatures higher than 45 °C while some tolerant lines/cultivars showed better responses than sensitive. However tolerant lines showed slightly damaged compared to susceptible and highly susceptible lines, below scoring was used for classify genotypes/populations (Wei-hun et al. 2012).

Fig. 2.5
figure 5

Various steps of the protocol for screening rice seedlings for heat tolerance

Table 2.1 Evaluation scores of seedlings for heat tolerance

2.2.6 Heat Tolerance Index (HTI)

After heat stress treatment, mutants were relocated to normal conditions with control plants. Two days after treatment data were recorded for shoot and root lengths, shoot and root fresh weights, shoot and root dry weights for stressed seedlings along with their respective controls grown under normal temperature.

A heat screening scale based on the response to stress was developed using parameters showing significant correlations with each other and with relative heat tolerance. Parameters were tested under control as well as heat stress and stress index was calculated for each parameter. The HTI is calculated by dividing the sum of individual scores for each parameter by the total score and multiplied by 100%. The genotypes are graded from tolerant to sensitive.

Stress tolerance indices (STIs) for the recorded traits are calculated as follows (Fernandez 1992; Blum 1988):

$$ \mathrm{STI}=\left(\mathrm{Value}\kern0.17em \mathrm{under}\kern0.17em \mathrm{stress}/\mathrm{Value}\;\mathrm{at}\;\mathrm{control}\right)\times 100 $$

The genotypes were graded as tolerant, moderately tolerant, moderately sensitive and sensitive (Ashraf et al. 1999). Tables 2.2, 2.3, 2.4 and 2.5 summarize the data from one representative screening carried out on rice at the seedling stage in hydroponics and in pots and trays.

Table 2.2 Classification of heat tolerance in seedlings stage of various rice genotypes compared to medium heat tolerant cv. IR64 from NIAB Pakistan
Table 2.3 Classification of heat tolerance at the seedling stage of various rice genotypes compared to heat tolerant (HT) cv. N22 from FAO/IAEA PBGL, Seibersdorf, Austria
Table 2.4 Classification of heat tolerance at the seedling stage of various rice genotypes compared to heat tolerant (HT) cv. N22 from Jawaharlal Nehru University, India
Table 2.5 Classification of heat tolerance at the seedling stage of 669 mutant lines compared to parental (wild type) and HT sensitive cv. WAB 56-104 from Sokoine University, UR Tanzania

2.2.7 Recovery Stage After Heat Treatment

Heat tolerant lines that survive and recover after the heat stress at 45 °C may also be transplanted in hydroponics or soils. Selected seedlings can be grown on to maturity in hydroponic tanks filled with Yoshida solution changed every 2 weeks. Selected tolerant seedlings were gently teased out of the test tanks with care taken to keep roots intact. The base of the aerial part of each selected seedling is then wrapped in a sponge strip (10 × 2 × 1 cm) and the seedlings inserted into a recovery tank (Fig. 2.6a–c).

Fig. 2.6
figure 6

Recovery of seedlings after heat treatment and transferto hydroponics or pots. Selected seedlings transferred to hydroponics and pots (a and c) and pots (c). These lines can be grown on until maturity (b and d) (Pictures from Joint FAO/IAEA Division PBGL Lab, Sokoine University in URT and Nuclear Institute for Agriculture and Biology (NIAB), Pakistan)

Heat tolerant lines may also be transplanted into 5 l pots containing soil. The seedlings were maintained individually and single plants and allowed to form tillers and panicles. Preliminary data comparisons may be recorded on better lines with respect to: plant height, number of tillers, days to flowering, number of panicles, panicle length, sterility and fertility of panicle as well as yield data such as seed number, weight, and thousand grain weights for each individual plant per pot. Seeds from single plants are kept separately for multiplication in the next generation (Fig. 2.6d).

2.3 Screening Protocol for Heat Tolerance in Rice at the Flowering Stage

2.3.1 Germination and Seedling Establishment in Hydroponics and Pots

Uniform healthy seedlings (8–10 days old) are selected and grown individually in hydroponics (Fig. 2.7). The glasshouse set up for rice: 28/20 °C day/night temperatures with 70% humidity and 16 h photoperiod. The hydroponics and pot culture set ups were the same as that described in Sects. 2.2 and 2.3. The glasshouse should be disease-free and well-lit by natural and/or artificial lighting. 15-cm pots are recommended for single plants as these give enough seed yield and panicle number for line evaluation.

Fig. 2.7
figure 7

(a) Pre-germinated rice seedlings in petri dishes, 8–10 day’s old young seedlings transplanted to (b) pots and or (c) boxes (each box contains 9–10 plants). (d) Rice seedlings transplanted to hydroponics and grow on to the flowering stage (Pictures from Joint FAO/IAEA Division PBGL Lab)

Every 2 weeks, the hydroponics solution needs to be changed. Hydroponics is also aerated by agitation twice in a week. Pots and boxes with soil culture were irrigated twice a week to maintain soil saturation. N, P, K fertiliser applications were done prior to transplanting and panicle emergence, which may be variable depending on the genotype.

Seedling establishment of control (standard) plant materials and test plant materials, care of seedlings in hydroponic, pots and boxes are same as described in Sects. 2.2 and 2.3.

2.3.2 Heat Treatment at the Flowering Stage

Two treatments were applied to test genotypes (1) plants with no heat stress exposure (control) and (2) plants subjected to heat stress at flowering stage. Breeding lines and cultivars are used, with standards N22, IR64 as a heat tolerant/moderately tolerant standards; IR 52 and/or WAB 56 100 were used as heat sensitive standards for comparative purposes. Plants were transferred to controlled environmental chambers/growth room conditions at the beginning of anthesis (first day) for heat stress treatments. Various heat stress treatments were investigated, all beginning at anthesis for various durations (2–6 h to 3–6 days) and at various temperatures ranging from 35 to 39 °C. Here we describe the most effective treatment, at 39 °C for 4 days, 6 h per day and 35 °C, 6 days, 6 h per day and 38 °C, 5 days and 4 h per day).

First Treatment

A set of 12 mutant lines (one plant grown per pot) were taken for testing high temperature tolerance. The main tiller of each plant was tagged before exposing plants to high temperature at flowering. On the appearance of the first flower on the main tiller plants were transferred to growth chambers at 07:00 h before the anthesis process starts. Environmental control chambers are set at 39 °C with 80% relative humidity during the period of 6 hours 08:00–14:00 covering the anthesis period for each day. During anthesis, opened spikelets from four replicates (five spikelets from each plant) are marked with a permanent marker pen and moved to growth chamber for heat application.

Second Treatment

Each genotype replicate consisted of ten pots with one to two plants per pot. Alternatively, 10 plants per genotype were grown up in soil filled boxes. Screens consisted of three replicates per genotype. Half (5) of the 10 pots or boxes were maintained in glasshouse conditions and served as controls. The other 5 were placed in a growth chamber and exposed to high temperatures at anthesis as described below. Illustration of heat stress treatments on rice at the flowering stage is given Fig. 2.8.

Fig. 2.8
figure 8

Heat stress phenotyping in growth chambers at 35.0–39.0 °C/28 °C (day/night) for 6–4/18–20 h for 6–4 days 80% relative humidity (a, c and d). Heat stress application in growth chamber with pots, trays and hydroponics. (b) Enlarged view of panicles (Pictures from Jawaharlal Nehru University, India)

Heat stress treatment; At the beginning of anthesis, five pots per replicate of each genotype are transferred to growth chambers conditions in the morning 07:00 am with 80% humidity exposed to 35 °C for 6 days 6 h, and 38 °C 5 days 4 h respectively on consecutive days. The main tiller of each pot is tagged before exposing plants to high temperature at anthesis. At the first day of anthesis tagged plants were transferred to growth chambers set at 35–38 °C with 80% relative humidity as of from 7:00 AM every day. After each daily heat stress application, plants were returned to normal glasshouse conditions (30/20 °C day/night temperatures with 80% humidity). Plant phenotyping and heat stress treatment in growth chamber at flowering stage are shown in Fig. 2.9.

Fig. 2.9
figure 9

Illustration of heat stress treatments on rice at the flowering stage

2.3.3 Screening for Heat Tolerance at the Flowering Stage

Spikelet fertility at maturity was used to screen heat tolerance of tested genotypes. Plant height and tiller number per plant were recorded. Mature panicles were harvested from five remaining pots for grain yield per plant recording, grain quality traits and calculating spikelet fertility (by counting empty and grain-filled spikelets). Main tillers were tagged and after harvest panicles were manually threshed, numbers of filled and unfilled grains per panicle were recorded. Each floret can be pressed between forefinger and thumb to determine if the grain is filled or not. Both partially and fully filled spikelets were categorized as filled spikelets.

Spikelet fertility is calculated as below;

$$ \mathrm{Spikelet}\ \mathrm{fertility}=\frac{\mathrm{Number}\ \mathrm{of}\ \mathrm{filled}\ \mathrm{grains}}{\mathrm{Total}\ \mathrm{number}\ \mathrm{of}\ \mathrm{reproductive}\ \mathrm{sites}\ \left(\mathrm{floret}\right)}\times 100 $$

Spikelet fertility was calculated in control and high temperature stress conditions. The negative effect (% decrease from control) was determined per genotype.

Reduced fertility of more than 65% is classed as highly susceptible, between 25–65% classed as intermediate (moderately susceptible) and less than 25% is classified as heat tolerant. This quantification has been adapted from species, ecotype and cultivar differences in spikelet fertility and harvest index of rice in response to high temperature stress (Prasad et al. 2006; Rang et al. 2011) (Tables 2.6, 2.7 and 2.8).

Table 2.6 Classification of heat tolerance at the seedling stage of various rice genotypes compared to the heat tolerant (HT) cv. N 22 from FAO/IAEA PBG Seibersdorf, Austria, (treatment 35 °C for 6 days, 6 h per days)
Table 2.7 Classification of heat tolerance at the flowering stage of various rice genotypes from Jawaharlal Nehru University, India compared to the heat tolerant (HT) cv. N 22 (treatment 39 °C for 4 days, 4 h per day)
Table 2.8 Classification of heat tolerance at the flowering stage of mutant lines compare to parental (wild type) genotypes and HT sensitive cv. WAB 56-104 and parental lines from Sokoine University, UR Tanzania (treatment 38 °C for 5 days, 4 h per days)