Patent ID: 11892440
Assignee: RUBBER RESEARCH INSTITUTE, CHINESE ACADEMY OF TROPICAL AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
Field: Measurement (Instruments)
Classification: CPC G  Y | IPC G

Claim 0:
1. A method for evaluating cold tolerance of Hevea brasiliensis, comprising:
(1) taking different one-year-old germplasm plants of the Hevea brasiliensis with second whorls of leaves entering a stable period as materials, firstly culturing at a normal temperature, then treating at a low temperature, and respectively measuring relative electrical conductivities at a stage of the normal temperature and physiological indexes of the cold tolerance at a stage of the low temperature, wherein a variety 93114 is used as a cold tolerance control and a Reyan 73397 is used as a sensitive control; and
(2) according to changes of the physiological indexes of the cold tolerance in the germplasm plants of the Hevea brasiliensis, comprehensively evaluating the cold tolerance of the materials by using a fuzzy membership function method;
when comprehensive indexes of the cold tolerance are larger, the cold tolerance of the materials is better; materials with the comprehensive indexes of the cold tolerance larger than or equal to the variety 93114 as the cold tolerance control are evaluated as strong cold tolerance, materials with the comprehensive indexes smaller than or equal to the Reyan 73397 as the sensitive control are evaluated as low cold tolerance, and materials with the comprehensive indexes between two control varieties are evaluated as medium cold tolerance;
the treating at the low temperature specifically comprises: culturing the different germplasm plants of the Hevea brasiliensis to be tested at a normal temperature of 26° C. for 48 h, and treating at 0° C. for 72 h, where a humidity is kept at 90% and a photoperiod comprises 16 h of daylight/8 h of darkness; and
the physiological indexes of the cold tolerance comprise chlorophyll contents, soluble sugar contents, malondialdehyde contents, proline contents, the relative electrical conductivities and injury rates.