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Inheritance of Time to Flowering in Chickpea in a Short-Season Temperate Environment
Author(s) -
Yadeta Anbessa,
Thomas D. Warkentin,
Albert Vandenberg,
Rosalind A. Ball
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of heredity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1471-8505
pISSN - 0022-1503
DOI - 10.1093/jhered/esj009
Subject(s) - biology , epistasis , polygene , temperate climate , inheritance (genetic algorithm) , trait , growing season , quantitative trait locus , adaptation (eye) , distribution (mathematics) , agronomy , gene , genetics , botany , computer science , programming language , mathematical analysis , mathematics , neuroscience
Time to flowering is central in determining the adaptation and productivity of chickpea in short-season temperate environments. We studied the genetic control of this trait in three crosses, 272-2 x CDC Anna, 298T-9 x CDC Anna, and 298T-9 x CDC Frontier. From each cross, 180 F2 plants and parents were evaluated for time to flowering under greenhouse conditions. In summer 2004, multiple generations including P1, F1, P2, F2, and F2:3 (also called MG5) were evaluated for time to flowering under field conditions. The data on time to flowering in the F(2) populations were continuous in distribution but deviated from normal distribution. The F2:3 families derived from this showed a bimodal distribution for time to flowering, a typical case of major-gene inheritance model with duplicate recessive epistasis. A joint segregation analysis of MG5 also revealed that time to flowering in chickpea was controlled by two major genes along with other polygenes. Late flowering was dominant over early flowering for both major genes with digenic interaction between them, mainly an additive x additive type. This information can be used to formulate the most efficient breeding strategy for improvement of time to flowering in chickpea in short-season temperate environments.

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