INTRODUCTION AND EVALUATION OF CLONES DERIVED FROM CHINESE SACCHARUM SPONTANEUM AND ERIANTHUS SPP.
By JOHN FOREMAN, PHILLIP JACKSON, KAREN AITKEN, JINGCHUAN LI, WANG LIPING, FU CHENG, FAN YUANHONG, DENG HAIHUA, HU FENGDUO, and BARRY CROFT
THIS PAPER describes the introduction and initial field evaluation of clones
derived from crosses between sugarcane and clones of three wild species,
Saccharum spontaneum, Erianthus arundinaceus and E. rockii, collected in
China. Seed from crosses made in China was imported to Australia in 2003–
2005 following protocols developed in association with Biosecurity Australia.
Progeny were tested to confirm putative parentage using DNA markers. This
testing revealed the first confirmed Erianthus backcross clones in Australia, and
clones derived from diverse sources of S. spontaneum. These clones represent
significant new sources of diverse germplasm for Australian sugarcane breeding
programs. Initial evaluation of some clones in small plots is suggestive of many
clones being vigorous with high biomass compared with sugarcane cultivars.
Future plans are aimed at rapidly taking commercial advantage of this material
for future sugar or sugar/energy production systems. Of particular priority is to
evaluate selections in multi-row plots to obtain more reliable data on yields. This
includes evaluating performance under marginal, dry environments, and for
ratooning performance, where it is hoped this material may have particular
advantage compared with current sugarcane cultivars. One to two further
backcrosses of selected clones to high CCS sugarcane parents will probably be
required for production of cultivars suitable for sugar production systems.
However, some clones already available in the F1 and BC1 generation may be
suited to possible production systems of the future that require low cost biomass
feedstock for energy production.