- Turkish Journal of Agriculture and Forestry
- Volume:38 Issue:5
- Analysis of variability, heritability, and genetic advance in seed yield and related traits of orcha...
Analysis of variability, heritability, and genetic advance in seed yield and related traits of orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.) populations
Authors : Hayati ŞEKER, Ayşe YAZICI, Pınar UYSAL
Pages : 633-643
Doi:10.3906/tar-1312-95
View : 15 | Download : 7
Publication Date : 2014-10-01
Article Type : Research Paper
Abstract :Orchardgrass insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(Dactylis glomerata L.); genotypes from different natural sources in the Eastern Anatolian Region of Turkey were clonally evaluated to study genetic variation and the relationships between seed yield and its components using a randomized complete block design. Results showed very significant genotypic variances among genotypes for all traits, including agronomic insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(seed, dry matter, and biological yields);, morphological insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(plant height; panicle length; crown diameter; numbers of fertile, sterile, and total stems; and stem intensity);, physiological insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(percent fertile stems, harvest and fertility indexes);, and phenological insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(heading and anthesis dates); traits, as well as genotype × year interaction variances. Genotypic components were the main contributor to phenotypic variation of all traits insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(except physiologic traits, stem intensity, and number of sterile stems);, resulting in high broad-sense heritability insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(>50%);. Agromorphological and physiological traits had greater phenotypic insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(PCV);, genotypic insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(GCV);, and environmental coefficients of variation, while these were lower for phenological traits. After the phenological traits, plant height, crown diameter, and panicle length were the least variable traits, while stem intensity and fertility index were highly variable. Heritability estimates increased as GCV values approached PCV values. Expected genetic gain greatly increased as heritability estimates and PCV both increased, rather than heritability values alone. The first 5 principle components accounted for 84.90% of total variance. All agromorphological traits insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(except number of sterile stems); and fertile stem percentage were primary sources of variation of the PC1 axis, while harvest and fertility indexes were for PC2. Out of the 4 clusters, genotypes in cluster 4 of higher seed yield were faster in aboveground biomass accumulation. They also had the best agromorphological traits coupled with early maturity. Seed yield greatly increased as aerial biomass increased without any change in harvest index, but there was a significant decrease in fertility index. It was concluded that selection for dry matter yield could result in a simultaneous increase in seed yield.Keywords : Biometric parameters, multivariate analysis, orchardgrass, phenotypic traits, seed yield