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Breeding rapeseed for oil and meal quality
Authors:R K Downey  B M Craig  C G Youngs
Affiliation:(1) Research Station, Canada Agriculture, University Campus, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada;(2) Prairie Regional Laboratory of National Research Council, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Abstract:Significant variation in fatty acid composition occurs within the seed oils of theBrassica genus, which includes the mustards and rapeseed. Research into the inheritance and biosynthesis of fatty acids has shown that at least two biosynthetic pathways exist in the developing rapeseed and some of the steps are under direct genetic control. The plant breeder has the basic knowledge in this oilseed crop to produce seed oils with defined fatty acid composition, and a practical example is the commercial development of Canbra oil, the rapeseed oil from which erucic acid has been eliminated.Brassica seed meals contain thioglucosides which may cause metabolic disturbances when fed to certain classes of livestock. The major thioglucosides in rapeseed meal are those giving rise to 3-butenyl and 4-pentenyl isothiocyanate and 5-vinyl-2-oxazolidinethione. Partial success in eliminating these compounds has been achieved by breeding strains of turnip rape (B. campestris) which do not contain the glucosides of 4-pentenyl isothiocyanate and oxazolidinethione, and the identification of aB. napus variety with very low levels of all three glucosides. These findings suggest that complete removal of these sulfur compounds may be possible through plant breeding. Contribution No. 309, Research Station, Canada Department of Agriculture, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. Presented at the AOCS Meeting, Chicago, October 1967.
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