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Heritabilities and associations of seed yield components and seed yield in tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea, Schreb.)

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Title Heritabilities and associations of seed yield components and seed yield in tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea, Schreb.)
Names Thomas, Johnny Ray (creator)
Frakes, Rod (advisor)
Date Issued 1966-06-21 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1967
Abstract Estimates of heritability and associations of tiller number,
seed number, seed weight, and seed yield were determined in two
groups of tall fescue. Group E was early maturing and had eight
parental clones, while group I was intermediate in maturity and had
nine parental clones. The parents and five progeny groups were included
in the study: first generation selfed progeny (S₁), open-pollinated progeny, polycross progeny, single-cross progeny, and
selfed progeny from the single-crosses (F₂).
Each entry consisted of ten plants in a nine foot row, with three
feet between rows. The plants were established in the field in October
1962, in a randomized block design with four replications. Data
were collected during the summers of 1963, 1964, and 1965.
Group E plants had slightly higher seed yields than group I plants.
This yield advantage was mainly the result of heavier seeds in group E.
The parents and the open-pollinated, polycross, and single-cross progeny were generally highest in performance for all four
characteristics, while the S₁ progeny were intermediate and the F₂
progeny were lowest in performance. The open-pollinated and polycross
progeny were limited in their usefulness for evaluating
breeding material since there were no significant differences among
the open-pollinated progenies in 13 of 24 analyses of variance and
there were no significant differences among the polycross progenies in
12 of 24 analyses of variance.
Six methods (regression of the S₁ progeny on the parents, two
times the regression of the open-pollinated progeny on the parents,
two times the regression of the polycross progeny on the parents, regression
of the single-cross progeny on the mid-parents, regression
of the F₂ progeny on the mid-parents, and mean squares from the
diallel analysis) of estimating heritability were compared for both
populations. There were large differences in the heritability estimates
among years and among methods. Two methods, 2([superscript b][subscript OP.P])
and [superscript b][subscript SX.MP'] generally resulted in higher heritability estimates than
the other four methods. The "average heritability" (averaged across
six methods and three years) for tiller number, seed number, seed
weight, and seed yield were .187, .371, .506, and .193 respectively
for group E and .567, .417, .622, and .374 for group I.
The correlation and path-coefficient analysis for groups E and I indicated that tiller number had the largest direct effect in 1963,
while seed number was most important in 1964 and both were equally
important in 1965. Seed weight had relatively small effects all three
years. All indirect effects were minor in both populations.
The correlations and the direct and indirect effects for the
parent, single-cross and F₂ generations were more variable and
they were not always in agreement with the direct and indirect effects
for the combined data of the parents and five progeny groups.
There were large negative indirect effects in the individual generations
which were not evident for the combined data of the parents and
five progeny groups.
Group E could be improved most by breeding for increased
seed number while selection for yield would be most worthwhile in
group I. However, maximum improvement could be made by combining
the attributes of the two populations. The high seed weight of
group E could be incorporated into group I and seed number of group
E could be increased by crossing plants of group E with plants of
group I.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Fescue
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/47437

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