tailieunhanh - Transgressive segregation for yield and its component traits in rice (Oryza sativa L.)

Transgressive segregation produces hybrid progeny phenotypes that exceed the parental phenotypes. Unlike heterosis, extreme phenotypes caused by transgressive segregation are heritably stable. Maximum genetic variation in F2 generation provides the first opportunity for selection of individual plants, any one of which may end up into a new cultivar. F2 plants that surpassed the parental limits were observed in both the crosses for all the traits viz., plant height, number of panicles per plant, panicle length, number of grains per panicle, spikelet fertility, biomass per plant, grain yield per plant, harvest index and 1000 grain weight. High frequency of favourable transgressive segregants were observed for plant height and number of grains per panicle in the cross between BPT5204 and NLR33892, whereas BPT5204 x NLR33892 cross recorded higher number of desirable transgressive segregants spikelet fertility. Polygenic inheritance and high frequencies of favourable transgressive segregants for yield and its component traits indicates there is a lot of scope to bring in beneficial alleles into a single genotype through careful selection in later generations. | Transgressive segregation for yield and its component traits in rice (Oryza sativa L.)