Author:
Jahufer M. Z. Z.,Gawler F. I.
Abstract
Seed yield is an important criterion that determines the commercial
acceptability of new cultivars. Often, the seed yielding capacity of a forage
cultivar is tested only in the final stages of its development. A more
efficient strategy would be to screen and select plants for seed yield at an
early stage of breeding. An important objective of the National White Clover
Breeding Program based at the Agriculture Victoria Pastoral and Veterinary
Institute, Hamilton, is to assess the genetic diversity for important
morphological attributes among germplasm accessions. A set of 53 accessions,
which included germplasm collected from Morocco and Tunisia and a range of
commercial cultivars, was characterised for seed yield components. The seed
yield components were number of ripe inflorescences, number of florets per
ripe inflorescence, number of seeds per pod, floret size, and inflorescence
height. Potential seed yield was estimated. The magnitude of genotypic
variation, together with the accession mean repeatability estimates, indicated
the presence of genetic variation among the 53 accessions for all attributes.
Both phenotypic and genotypic correlation coefficients indicated a strong
positive association between total number of ripe inflorescences and seed
yield. There was also a positive phenotypic and genotypic correlation between
seed yield and number of florets per inflorescence. Cluster analysis of the 53
accessions based on seed yield components resulted in the generation of 6
groups. Principal component analysis helped to identify 5 accessions that
could be potentially useful in improving the seed yield of white clover
germplasm selected for superior agronomic and herbage yield attributes.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
20 articles.
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