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  • 1
    ISSN: 1439-0523
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Ten selected inbred backcross lines (IBL), from a Lycopersicon esculentum cv.‘Peto 84’×Lycopersicon pennellii IBL population, with resistance to beet armyworm (BAW), Spodoptera exigua, higher fruit mass and fruit yield, were crossed with eight elite cultivated L. esculentum inbred lines in a Design II mating design. Three elite inbreds were also crossed to ‘Peto 84′, the IBL recurrent parent, as a control for combining ability. Field plots of all resulting F1 progenies and control cultivars were inoculated with BAW eggs and evaluated for resistance to BAW, fruit mass, fruit yield, vine size and maturity at three field locations. Reductions in fruit damage by BAW were found in four of the 10 IBL F1 progenies. Significant male and female general combining ability (GCA) estimates for BAW resistance were observed, but significant specific combining ability for BAW resistance was not detected. The fruit mass of F1 hybrids was significantly lower than large-fruited controls, but was not significantly different from elite inbred by ‘Peto 95’F1 hybrids. Selection based on inbred performance identified IBL with positive GCA for BAW resistance and yields in Design II hybrids. BAW resistance in the 09 selected IBL and IBL- derived F1 progeny was associated with two undesirable traits, later maturity and larger vine size. Index selection of IBL was more effective at identifying IBL with positive GCA for fruit mass and fruit yield than GCA for BAW resistance.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: breeding ; common bean ; dinitrogen fixation ; 15N-depleted fertilizer ; N partitioning ; Phaseolus vulgaris L. ; selection
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The improvement of N2 fixation in legumes may lead to increased yields and reduced fertilizer requirement. Levels of N2 fixation were determined for three cultivars and nine progeny lines from two inbred backcross common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) populations that were grown at Hancock, Wissconsin in 1984 and 1985 using 15N-depleted (NH4)2SO4. The high N2-fixing line ‘Puebla 152’ was the donor parent for both inbred backcross populations and the cultivars ‘Porrillo Sintetico’ and ‘Sanilac’ were the recurrent parents for populations 21 and 24, respectively. Total N yield, fixed N2 and % N derived from the atmosphere were determined for whole plants and plant parts at the R3 (50% bloom) and R9 (maturity) growth stages. Significant year-by-line interactions were found for N2 fixation traits among the population 21 lines and parents, but not for population 24 lines and their parents. Measures of N2 fixation at R3 were inadequate to predict N2 fixation at R9. Population 24 lines and parents differed for N2 fixation ability at R9, and fixed N2 was correlated with maturity. The recovery of an inbred backcross progeny line, 24-21, which matured earlier and fixed more N2 than the recurrent parent ‘Sanilac’ indicated that N2 fixation was heritable and that favorable alleles, independent of maturity, were recovered from a late-maturing, high N2-fixing donor parent by utilizing the inbred backcross breeding method. Since most fixed N2 and non-fixed N (〉80%) was found in the seeds at maturity, and most lines did not vary for the distribution of nitrogen throughout the plant, selection for improved remobilization of nitrogen to the seed to increase yield is impractical in this genetic material. The highest N2-fixing lines tended to have high and similar % Ndfa in all plant parts.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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