Abstract
The objectives of this study were to estimate changes in oil content, grain yield, percentage of broken plants and changes in yield components in the maize populations DS7u and YuSSSu. As estimations were performed at C0 and C9 for both populations, it was possible to observe changes occurring following long-term mass selection for high oil content. The synthetic population DS7u population was developed by recombination of 29 inbred lines of Yugoslav, Canadian and US origin. The synthetic population YuSSSu population is an Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic - BSS(R)C5. Progenies were derived according to the North Carolina Design II. Results indicated that nine cycles of selection led to statistically significant increase in oil content and statistically significant decrease for grain yield in both populations. Estimates of additive and dominance variances for grain oil content were highly significant in C0 and C9 of the population DS7u population. Dominance variance showed significance in the initial cycle of the population YuSSSu population, but it was not detected in the course of nine cycles of mass selection. Additive and dominance variances for grain yield were highly significant in both initial populations. Loss of significance did not result from selection, while the proportion of dominance vs. additive variance became greater. High narrow-sense heritability was detected for grain yield, oil content, moisture content, and cob percent in the initial cycles of both populations. Mass selection resulted in increased heritability for oil content and cob percent in the DS7u population and increased heritability for percentage of broken plants in the YuSSSu population. The strongest additive correlation between oil content and other traits was detected for grain moisture (r a = 0.90*) in the C9 of the DS7u population.
corn; mass selection; high oil populations; components of genetic variance; additive and phenotypic correlations
Nine cycles of mass selection for increasing oil content in two maize (Zea mays L.) synthetics
Milorad Rosulj, S. Trifunovic and I. Husic
Breeding Department, Maize Research Institute, Zemun Polje, Belgrade, Yugoslavia.
ABSTRACT
The objectives of this study were to estimate changes in oil content, grain yield, percentage of broken plants and changes in yield components in the maize populations DS7u and YuSSSu. As estimations were performed at C0 and C9 for both populations, it was possible to observe changes occurring following long-term mass selection for high oil content. The synthetic population DS7u population was developed by recombination of 29 inbred lines of Yugoslav, Canadian and US origin. The synthetic population YuSSSu population is an Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic - BSS(R)C5. Progenies were derived according to the North Carolina Design II. Results indicated that nine cycles of selection led to statistically significant increase in oil content and statistically significant decrease for grain yield in both populations. Estimates of additive and dominance variances for grain oil content were highly significant in C0 and C9 of the population DS7u population. Dominance variance showed significance in the initial cycle of the population YuSSSu population, but it was not detected in the course of nine cycles of mass selection. Additive and dominance variances for grain yield were highly significant in both initial populations. Loss of significance did not result from selection, while the proportion of dominance vs. additive variance became greater. High narrow-sense heritability was detected for grain yield, oil content, moisture content, and cob percent in the initial cycles of both populations. Mass selection resulted in increased heritability for oil content and cob percent in the DS7u population and increased heritability for percentage of broken plants in the YuSSSu population. The strongest additive correlation between oil content and other traits was detected for grain moisture (ra = 0.90*) in the C9 of the DS7u population.
Key words: corn, mass selection, high oil populations, components of genetic variance, additive and phenotypic correlations.
Received: June 13, 2002; accepted: October 18, 2002.
INTRODUCTION
Recurrent selection is a cyclic breeding procedure designed to improve trait means of populations under selection. This can be accomplished by a gradual increase in the frequency of favourable alleles with the simultaneous maintenance of genetic variability. Mass selection is the oldest and simplest form of recurrent selection. Its simplicity and the completion of a cycle in the course of one year are its greatest advantages over other methods. Moreover, mass selection is most efficient for traits with high heritability. Hopkins initiated studies on methods for increasing maize grain oil content at the University of Illinois in 1896. The studies established over a century ago are still in progress. Dudley and Lambert (1992) published results from 90 generations of selection for increased and decreased oil and protein content in maize. Summarized results of the same studies were also previously published previously, but they referred to shorter periods of selection (Smith, 1908; Woodwort et al., 1952; Dudley, 1973; Dudley et al., 1974; Dudley, 1977). Dudley and Lambert (1992) reported that the reached grain oil content in the Illinois High Oil population was 22%, but the upper plateau from selection had not been achieved yet.
Using this method, with slight modifications, Alexander (1962) increased oil content in BSSS from 4.2% to 7%. After 62 cycles of mass selection oil content in the open-pollinated variety Burr White increased from 4.7% to over 15% (Alexander, 1977). After the 76th cycle, the increase amounted to 19%, i.e., to 279% of the original population mean (Dudley, 1977).
Grain oil content increased from 5.1% to 17% in the population Alexho synthetic population after 24 cycles of phenotypic recurrent selection for high oil content. The total increase was 231% of the original population mean. The average change in oil percent oil was 4.9%, 2.1% and 2.4% cycle-1 per se, cycles crossed to B73, and cycles crossed to R802A, respectively (Misevic et al., 1989). According to Saratlic (1994) oil content increased by 120% and 97% after seven cycles of mass selection in the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively.
Sprague and Brimhall (1950) and Sprague et al. (1952) used a variation of mass selection. Oil content was increased from 4.97% to 7% or 0.41% cycle-1 during five seasons of selection.
Recently mass selection has gained even greater importance, due to the introduction of the TOP CROSS system into production for oil content. The TOP CROSS system licensed by DuPont may minimize the yield disadvantage associated with conventional high oil corn hybrids (Edge, 1997; Lambert et al., 1997). The TOP CROSS system uses the sterile version of a hybrid (90-95%) as a means to obtain high yield, and high-oil population (5-10%) as a pollinator. Due to the effect of xenia half of the oil content of the oil population is transferred to the sterile (female) version of the hybrid. In this way it is possible to gain both high yield and high oil content.
The objectives of this study were to estimate the following in the DS7u and YuSSSu maize populations: (i) mean, (ii) additive and dominance variance as well as their interaction with the environment, (iii) heritability, and (iv) phenotypic and additive genetic correlations. Because estimations were performed at C0 and C9 for both populations, it was possible to observe total realized changes occurring during the long-term mass selection for high oil content.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Populations and genetic materials
According to Dumanovic (1995), the DS7u synthetic population DS7u was developed by inter-mating 29 inbred lines of Yugoslav, Canadian, and U.S. origin. During the first two years, inter-mating was performed in an isolated field with moderate selection for plant type and resistance to lodging. The YuSSSu synthetic population YuSSSu is from the Iowa Stiff Stalk Synthetic, BSS(R)C5. Selection for high oil content was initiated in 1981 in both populations. The number of individual kernels analyzed within one ear, as well as the number of selected kernels from one ear, varied over cycles. Furthermore, selection intensity also varied from 15 to 25%.
The genetic material evaluated in the present study was derived from DS7uC0, DS7uC9, YuSSSuC0 and YuSSSuC9. One hundred and fifty plants per population were self-pollinated in 1996. Plants for pollination were randomly selected. Starting in the 1997 breeding nursery, a North Carolina Design II (factorial) mating design (Comstock and Robinson, 1948) was developed within each of the four populations. A series of half- and full-sib progenies was developed within each population by crossing four males (S0 plants) with each of four females (S1 progenies). Each male was crossed with several plants within each S1 progeny and the resulting seed was bulked to obtain a representative sample of the gametic array of the original S0 female plants (Hallauer and Miranda Filho, 1988). The average number, variance and range of S1 plants sampled per female within each population were 12.3, 8.2, and 5-20 for DS7uC0; 11.4, 5.2, and 5-17 for DS7uC9; 11.0, 11.1, and 5-20 for YuSSSuC0; and 9.4, 13.5, and 6-19 for YuSSSuC9, respectively. Thus, each set of 4 x 4 matings produced progenies from a sampling of eight random plants within each population. To achieve a reasonable sample of individuals, a series of 14 sets of 4 x 4 matings was constructed within each population, yielding a total sampling of 112 random S0 plants from each population. Therefore, a total of 224 full-sib and half-sib progenies (14 sets of 16 progenies) from each population was developed for field evaluation.
Experimental field design and traits studied
The total of 896 entries (full- and half-sib progenies) was evaluated within 14 sets of a replication-within-sets randomized incomplete block experiment (Comstock and Robinson, 1948). Each set consisted of 16 full- and half-sib progenies from each of the four individual populations completely randomized within each of two replications. The entries were grown at Zemun Polje, Indjija, and Becej, Yugoslavia, in 1998 and Zemun Polje, Indjija, and Srbobran, Yugoslavia, in 1999. A plot consisted of 9.20 m long hand-planted rows with 0.70 m between rows. Over-planted plots were thinned to a uniform plant density of approximately 62.111 plants ha-1. All experiments were machine-cultivated and manually weeded as necessary for proper weed control.
Harvest was done by hand. Data were observed for grain yield (mg ha-1, adjusted to 14.0% grain moisture), grain moisture (%) at harvest, root lodging (percentage of plants leaning more than 30° from the vertical) and stalk lodging (percentage of plants broken at/or below the primary ear node), and cob percent (%). A separate trial, with slightly lower plant density (59.523 plants ha-1) was set up in order to determine oil content (%). A plot consisted of 9.20 m long hand-planted rows with 0.70 m between rows. Due to the effect of xenia, oil content was determined under conditions of controlled pollination. Five plants per replication in each progeny row were selfed. The same number of kernels was selected from each ear and used to form the group sample. From group sample The three primary samples of the total weight of 60 g were selected from the group sample. These primary samples were used to determine oil content by the non-destructive method of Nuclear Magnetic Resonant (NMR) spectroscopy.
Statistical methods
The analysis of all trait data was based on plot means. Data for each trait were analyzed by pooling over sets and combining across environments. All effects in the model were considered random.
Full- and half-sib family means were used to construct the distribution histogram for each population. Kolmogorov-Smirnovs one-sample test and the Shapiro-Wilk and Lilliefors statistic tests were applied to test distribution (Snedecor and Cochran, 1989). Values that are significant indicate non-normality in the distribution. Estimates of skewness and kurtosis were calculated for each population distribution (Snedecor and Cochran, 1989). In the case of the sample from a normal distribution, the coefficients of skewness and kurtosis are distributed approximately around mean zero with a standard deviation of (6/n)1/2 and (24/n)1/2, respectively. Positive values of coefficients of skewness indicate an elongated upper tail, while negative value point to an elongated lower tail. Furthermore, positive coefficients of kurtosis suggest a distribution with tails longer than a normal one with equal standard deviation, whereas negative estimates of the coefficients indicate a distribution with a flat-topped characteristic.
The analyses of individual populations pooled over sets and combined across environments were calculated to partition the within population variation for each population into male, female and male x female interaction sources of variation. Because the genetic expectations for mean squares for male and female sources of variation were the same, their degrees of freedom and sums of squares were pooled to give more precise estimates of the variation among half-sib families. The within population x environment interaction degrees of freedom and sums of squares were partitioned similarly. The within population error mean squares were used to test significance of the within population x environment interaction sources of variation. The appropriate interaction mean square terms were then used for testing the within population components. Since direct tests of male, female, and pooled components were not available, (Satterthwaite, 1946) approximation was used to construct the appropriate F-test.
For the case of a Design II analysis with F = 0, covariances of full- (FS) and half-sibs (HS) are obtained by expanding the following general representation using F = 0 (Comstock and Robinson, 1948):
and
where i represents Additive and j represents Dominance. Then for Design II
and
Then, the expected values for covariances of relatives are:
and
Solving for expected mean square terms from the combined analysis of variance and equating to genetic parameters results in the following equations for estimating the genetic components of variance where , and represents variation among males and females at F = 0 (combined in this analysis), and represents variation among male by female crosses at F = 0.
and
Additive genetic variance , dominance genetic variance , additive genetic variance x environment , dominance genetic variance x environment , and error variance were calculated by equating the observed mean squares to the expected mean squares and solving the resulting system of equations.
Heritability was estimated on a half-sib progeny mean basis for individual traits within each population. Variance component and heritability estimates were declared significant if their values were two times greater than their standard errors (Falconer, 1989). Phenotypic and additive genetic correlations among traits within populations were calculated from the appropriate covariance components (Mode and Robinson, 1959).
RESULTS
Population means
Oil content in the DS7uC0population was 4.46% with an average coefficient of variance (CV) of 12.1%. Grain yield averaged 8.95 mg ha-1 and ranged from 6.52 mg ha-1 at Zemun Polje in 1999 to 11.07 mg ha-1 in Becej in 1998. The CV for grain yield was 13.5%. The average value for moisture content was 24.2%. Mean values for the percentage of lodged and broken plants and cob percent were 4.7% and 17.5%, respectively, with corresponding CV of 144.5% and 3.5% (Table I).
The grain oil content mean in the DS7uC9population was 10.91% with an average CV of 9.4%. Grain yield averaged 7.81 mg ha-1 and ranged from 5.63 mg ha-1 in Indjija in 1999 to 10.45 mg ha-1 in Becej in 1998. The CV for grain yield was 13%. The average value of moisture content value was 27.7%. Mean values of the percentage of lodged and broken plants and cob percent were 13.7% and 20.1%, respectively, with corresponding CV of 81.2% and 8.9% (Table I).
The grain oil content mean in the YuSSSuC0population was 4.17% with an average CV of 14.9%. Grain yield averaged 7.44 mg ha-1 and ranged from 4.40 mg ha-1 at Zemun Polje in 1999 to 11.07 mg ha-1 in Becej in 1998. The CV for grain yield was 16.1%. The average value of moisture content value was 30.6%. Mean values of the percentage of lodged and broken plants and cob percent were 10.7% and 22.9%, respectively, with corresponding CV of 89.9% and 9.9% (Table I).
The grain oil content mean in the YuSSSuC9population was 8.99% with an average CV of 9.4%. Grain yield averaged 6.61 mg ha-1 and ranged from 4.56 mg ha-1 at Zemun Polje in 1999 to 9.23 mg ha-1 in Becej in 1998. The CV for grain yield was 17.9%. The average value of moisture content was 30.7%. Mean values of the percentage of lodged and broken plants and cob percent were 7.8% and 21.4%, respectively, with corresponding CV of 109.6% and 7% (Table I).
Among populations analysis and means
Nine cycles of mass selection resulted in highly significant increases in oil content in both investigated populations. This increase amounted to 16.1% and 12.8% cycle-1 based on C0 in the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively. mean comparisons between the initial and the final cycle of phenotypic recurrent selection for high oil content showed a highly significant grain yield reduction in both populations. This reduction amounted to 1.41% cycle-1 and 1.24% cycle-1 based on C0in the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively. Grain moisture content was very significantly increased in the DS7u population (24.2%vs. 27.7%), while there was no statistically significant change in the YuSSSu population (30.6%vs. 30.7%). This increase, converted to relative parameters, amounted to 1.57% cycle-1 and 0.04% cycle-1 in the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively. Percentage of lodged and broken plants in the DS7u population significantly increased significantly (21.16% cycle-1), while it significantly decreased significantly (-2.92% cycle-1) in the YuSSSu population (Table I).
Population distributions and tests of normality
Normal distribution testing according to Kolmogorov-Smirnovs one-sample test showed that the frequency distribution for oil content in the DS7uC0 population did not depart from normality. frequency distribution for oil content in the DS7uC9 population significantly departed from normal distribution, which was confirmed by estimated values of all five parameters.
The Lilliefors and Shapiro-Wilk tests, as well as coefficients of kurtosis and skewness, indicated departure from normal distribution in the initial cycle of the YuSSSu population. Only the Kolmogorov-Smirnov one-sample test, which is the least sensitive, was not statistically significant. Highly significant estimates of all five parameters in the YuSSSuC9population pointed out that variability was greatly decreased (Table I, Figure 1).
Normal distribution testing according to the Kolmogorov-Smirnov one-sample test and the Shapiro-Wilk and Lilliefors tests showed that the frequency distribution for grain yield in the DS7uC0 population did not depart from normality. Moreover, the coefficients of kurtosis and skewness were not statistically significant, indicating the fact that there was an adequate variability in the initial population. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov one-sample test and coefficients of kurtosis were not significant in the C9 of the same population, while the Shapiro-Wilk and Lilliefors tests and coefficient of skewness were highly significant, indicating that some unfavourable changes in grain yield in relation to the parameter of normal distribution occurred during nine cycles of mass selection for high oil.
frequency distribution for grain yield in the YuSSSuC0population was normal according to the Kolmogorov-Smirnov one-sample test. However, the Lilliefors and Shapiro-Wilk tests were significant. Coefficients of kurtosis and skewness were not significant. Highly significant estimates of all five parameters in the YuSSSuC9 population point to the fact that frequency distribution for grain yield departed from normality (Table I, Figure 2).
Genetic components of variance
Estimates of genetic components of variance for grain oil content showed highly significant additive and dominance variance in the DS7uC0population. The ratio of additive to dominance variance was 1:0.41. In the DS7uC9 population estimates of additive and dominance variance were also highly significant and the ratio increased to 1:0.23 in favour of additive variance. This ratio in the YuSSSuC0 population was also in favour of additive (1:0.61), but significance was shown only for dominance variance. Mass selection for high oil content led to the loss of additive and dominance variance significance in the C9 cycle of this population, although the additive:dominance variance ratio did not change (1:0.60). The interactions of additive and dominance variance with environments were not statistically significant for the four investigated populations (Table II).
On the other hand, for grain yield, the genetic components of variance and their interactions with environments were all highly significant. The greatest contribution of additive variance was detected in the DS7uC0 population (1:0.20). Although the contribution of dominance variance increased after nine cycles of recurrent selection (1:0.30), additive variance was even greater. In the YuSSSu population the proportion of dominance variance was greater after selection (1:1.15) (Table II).
Additive variance and the dominance x environment interaction variance for grain moisture content were highly significant in all four populations. Changes occurring in the DS7u population included loss of significant dominance variance and the gain of significant additive x environment interaction variance. The additive:dominance variance ratio changed little. Additive variance had the greatest contribution in all four populations (Table II).
Considering the percentage of lodged and broken plants, high significance was determined for dominance x environment interaction in the population DS7uC0 population, dominance and additive x environment interaction in the population DS7uC9 population and additive x environment interaction in the population YuSSSuC0 population. Changes that occurred in the population DS7u population between the initial and final cycle referred to the gain in high significance of dominance variance and additive x environment interaction and the loss of significance in dominance x environment interaction. The additive:dominance variance ratio changed in favour of dominance. In the population YuSSSu population, additive x environment interaction lost its significance with the increased proportion of additive variance (Table II).
Additive variance and dominance x environments interaction was highly significant for cob percent in all four populations. Moreover, dominance variance was highly significant in the population YuSSSu population (Table II).
Heritability estimates
Relatively high and non-significant narrow-sense heritability for oil content (%) was present in the initial cycles of both investigated populations (h2DS7uC0 = 0.70 and h2YuSSSuC0 = 0.65). Mass selection resulted in the increase, i.e. the significant decrease of heratibility in the populations DS7u (h2DS7uC9 = 0.85) and YuSSSu populations (h2YuSSSuC9 = 0.13), respectively. Narrow-sense heritability for grain yield was highly significant and relatively high in the initial cycles of both populations (h2DS7uC0 = 0.72 and h2YuSSSuC0 = 0.67). After nine cycles of recurrent selection loss of significance was determined in the population DS7u population (h2DS7uC9 = 0.65), while narrow-sense heratibility was significantly lowered and loss of significance occurred in the population YuSSSu population (h2YuSSSuC9 = 0.43). Highly significant and high narrow-sense heratibility for grain moisture content was detected in all four populations. Completion of nine cycles of mass selection did not significantly affect heritability for this trait. Narrow-sense heritability for the percent of lodged and broken plants was low and insignificant in all populations. The decrease of narrow-sense heritability for the percent of lodged and broken plants occurred in the population DS7u population in the C9 cycle (h2DS7uC0 = 0.28: h2DS7uC9 = 0.19). On the other hand, corresponding estimates for the population YuSSSu population increased (h2YuSSSuC0 = 0.19: h2YuSSSuC9 = 0.40), Table III.
The population DS7u population expressed highly significant and high narrow-sense heritability for the cob percent with the increase in the last selection cycle of selection (h2DS7C0 = 0.67: h2DS7C9 = 0.74). Corresponding estimates for the population YuSSSu population decreased and amounted to h2YuSSSuC0 = 0.66: h2YuSSSuC9 = 0.37 (Table III).
Phenotypic and additive genetic correlation
No significant phenotypic or additive genetic correlations for oil content and grain yield were observed.
Weak, non-significant and negative phenotypic and additive genetic correlations between the grain oil content and the grain moisture were determined in the DS7uC0population. These correlations became positive and stronger in the same population in the C9. Correlations in YuSSSu were positive and weak in C0. Upon completion of mass selection great changes were observed in this population. The additive genetic correlation became significant, while the phenotypic correlation became highly significant.
Phenotypic and additive genetic correlations between the oil content and the percent of lodged and broken plants were non-significant in all populations.
Phenotypic and additive genetic correlations between the oil content and the cob percentage were non-significant in the C0 of both populations. For C9 only in YuSSSu populations, The correlations for C9 were statistically significant only in YuSSSu populations. Phenotypic and additive correlation between grain yield and moisture content was highly significant in C0 of both populations. After nine selection cycles of selection, correlation became non-significant only in YuSSSu, Table IV.
No significant phenotypic or additive genetic correlation was observed for grain yield and the percentage of lodged and broken plants in any population were was observed.
Highly significant and negative phenotypic and additive genetic correlation was detected between grain yield and the cob percent in C0 in both populations. In the course of nine cycles of mass selection, loss of significance occurred in additive genetic correlation in both populations and in phenotypic correlation in the YuSSSuC9population (Table IV).
DISCUSSION
Effects of selection on population mean performance
The highly significant increase in the oil content was confirmed after nine cycles of mass selection in both populations, 16.1% cycle-1 and 12.8% cycle-1 in the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively. The nine cycles amounted to 144.6% and 115.6% for the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively. As expected, results agree with those obtained by (Saratlic, 1994) who worked with the same populations and after seven selection cycles of selection achieved total increases of 120% and 97% for the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively. Alexander (1962), Dudley (1977), Dudley et al. (1992), Misevic et al. (1989), Sprague and Brimhall (1950), and Spraque et al. (1952) obtained similar results through mass selection for high oil content.
Nine cycles of phenotypic recurrent selection for high oil content resulted in yield reductions in both populations. Yield was reduced from 8.95 to 7.81 mg ha-1, or 1.41% cycle-1 in the DS7u population. The yield reduction in the population YuSSSu population was from 7.44 to 6.61 mg ha-1, or 1.24% cycle-1. These results are consistent with those of Saratlic (1994) for the DS7u population, which indicated a yield reduction of 3.35% cycle-1 after seven cycles of phenotypic recurrent selection for high oil content. Successful mass selection for high oil content leads to changes in correlated traits. Misevic et al. (1989) reported a total yield decrease of 1.72 mg ha-1 after 24 cycles of mass selection in the Alexho population. The average per cycle decrease in grain yield was 0.07 mg ha-1. Dudley and Lambert (1992), Alexander (1962), Dudley (1974), Misovic and Dumanovic (1990), Miller and Brimhall (1954), Dudley et al. (1974), Miller et al. (1981) and others also obtained similar results. The decrease in grain yield in the selection program for high oil content is explained by negative correlation between these two traits. Furthermore, it is possible that there is not sufficient variability among selected genotypes (on the basis of oil content) for the continued selection progress and/or there are unfavourable linked genes for oil content and grain yield. The yield decrease of the YuSSSu population is not in agreement with results from Saratlic (1994). He obtained a yield increase of 0.003% cycle-1 after seven cycles of mass selection for high oil content. This occurrence was explained by the fact that the population was derived from the BSSSC5population and previously had five cycles of recurrent selection for improved grain yield. As a result the yield initial yield level in this population was high enough that the frequency of favourable alleles could be reduced in the course of selection for high oil content. Furthermore, the presence of pleiotropic effects of certain genes, which could be included in inheritance of oil content and grain yield, is possible. The YuSSSuC9 yield reduction in this paper could also be explained also by its origin. Namely, since C0 of this population had undergone five cycles of recurrent selection for grain yield, it is possible that a decrease in variability for yield has occurred, and due to high frequency of favourable alleles, the consequences appeared sooner than in C9. The opinion of the majority of authors is that mass selection for improvement of another trait without appropriate attention paid to grain yield will lead to the reduction in grain yield. For example, Martin and Russel (1984), working on stalk quality improvement in the BS1 population, found a grain yield decrease of 12.3% cycle-1. Nyhus et al. (1989) reported a yield decrease of 5% cycle-1 in BSAA and BSBB populations selected for resistance to the European corn borer, while a similar decrease was obtained by Klenke et al. (1986) in the BS9 population amounting to 5.7% cycle-1.
Effect of selection on genetic parameters
Evaluated estimates of additive and dominance variances for grain oil content were highly significant for both DS7uC0 and C9. After selection, the ratio between additive and dominance variance increased from 2.5 to 5 in favour of additive variance. The additive x environment and dominance x environment interaction variances were not significant, indicating that effects of environments on grain oil content were not significant. This agrees with the results from Genter et al. (1956), Welch (1969), Jellum et al. (1973), and Jellum and Morion (1966). Based on the oil content increase in the population per se, Saratlic (1994) indicated that additive gene effects were the most important types of gene action governing this trait. Misevic et al. (1989), Miller et al. (1981), El Rouby and Penny (1967), Misevic (1982), Moreno-Gonzales et al. (1975), and Hallauer and Miranda Filho (1988) also found greater importance for additive gene effects in control of oil content.
Non-significant estimates of additive variance and highly significant estimates of dominance variance for the oil content were found in the YuSSSuC0 population. Loss of significant dominance variance occurred in C9 of this population. The interaction between environments and additive and dominance variance was not significant for C0 or C9of YuSSSu. The ratio between additive and dominance variance in YuSSSuC0and C9 was 1.6:1 in favour of additive variance. Misevic et al. (1985) reported highly significant estimates of genetic drift and inbreeding depression in the YuSSSuC5population that was probably a consequence of the selection process that was changed in C4, where instead of selecting the best ears for recombination, the best individual kernels were selected.
Estimates of additive and dominance variances for grain yield, as well as their interactions with environments, were highly significant in the DS7u population. The estimate of additive variance was five times greater than the estimate of dominance variance in DS7uC0. Nine cycles of mass selection for high oil content did not result in significant changes in genetic estimates for grain yield. The numeric value for additive variance decreased and it was three times greater than the dominance variance in DS7uC9. This can be used to explain the yield reduction over the course of selection for high oil content. Furthermore, this agrees with results obtained by Misevic (1982), who found that additive variance for grain yield was greater than dominance variance in the U1 population (developed by crosses of the population Fords High Oil population with the population Indiana Synthetic A population). Also, the results of 99 studies on different maize populations (Hallauer and Miranda Filho, 1988) pointed out that the relation between additive and dominance variance for grain yield averaged 1.6:1 in favour of additive variance.
Estimates of additive and dominance variances for grain yield, as well as their interaction with environments, were highly significant in the YuSSSuC0 population. In contrast to the DS7uC0 population, the ratio between additive and dominance variance in the YuSSSu population was 2.5:1. The numeric estimates of additive variance decreased over selection cycles of selection vs. dominance variance that increased, hence, the ratio between additive and dominance variance in C9 was 1:1.15 in favour of dominance. A survey of the literature indicated that maize improvement, i.e. an increase in the frequency of favourable alleles, resulted in different contributions and significance of genetic variance components for yield. Robinson (1963) pointed out that the additive component had greater significance in inheritance of grain yield and the majority of other traits in open-pollinated varieties and maize populations. As selection continued, the importance of additive variance decreased. Hence, the ratio between additive and dominance variance in grain yield inheritance was about equal (1:1) in the YuSSSuC0 population, which had previously undergone a high number of recurrent selection cycles. Oyervides-Garcia and Hallauer (1986), Helms et al. (1989), Keeratinijakal and Lamkey (1993) obtained similar results.
High narrow-sense heritability for oil content in DS7uC0 increased even further following nine cycles of mass selection. This agrees with estimated components of genetic variance, since the proportion of additive variance had increased in C9. According to Hallauer and Miranda Filho (1988), oil content and number of tassel branches are the traits expressing high heritability. Narrow-sense heritability decreased from h2 = 0.65 to h2 = 0.13 in the YuSSSu population. Dudley and Lambert (1992) reported a similar estimate of heritability (h2 = 0.11) for grain oil content after 90 selection cycles of selection in the IHO population.
Narrow-sense heritability for grain yield was statistically significant and relatively high in the C0 of both populations. Loss of significance and decrease in heritability for grain yield occurred after nine cycles of mass selection cycles for high grain oil content. This specifically refers to the YuSSSu population in which heritability decreased from h2 = 0.67 to h2 = 0.43, and it is in agreement with the estimated genetic variance components in which the proportion of additive variance decreased due to selection. Lamkey and Hallauer (1987) obtained similar results by looking at variances among progenies for 121 selection experiments from seven recurrent selection programmes (mass, ear-to-row, half-sib recurrent, S1-S2 recurrent, half-sib with genetically narrow-base tester, half-sib with broad-base tester, and reciprocal recurrent full-sib selection). Heritability for grain yield ranged from 53.3% (half-sib reciprocal recurrent selection with the use of an inbred tester) to 79.8% (S1recurrent selection). Based on 50 S1 progenies, Walters et al. (1991) found decrease in heritability for grain yield from 83% for BSSSC0 to 68% for BS13(S)C3. Moreover, Stucker and Hallauer (1992), using a Design II study on the basis of 48 random inbred lines from BSSSC0 and BS13(S)C1, determined a decrease in heritability for grain yield from 75% in BSSSC0 to 67% in BS13(S)C1. Heritability depends to a great extent on the breeding population and environmental conditions, as well as the means of estimation, hence, one should be careful in interpretations and comparisons between heritability estimates from different experiments.
The estimate of narrow-sense heritability for grain moisture was high (h2 = 0.75) and significant in both populations. This parameter was not significantly changed through selection. (Hallauer and Miranda Filho, 1988) analysed four experiments and concluded that the average estimate of heritability estimate for grain moisture was 0.62.
Heritability for cob percentage was high and significant in the initial cycles of both populations. As a result of mass selection heritability did not change significantly. Cortez-Mendoza (1977), and Laible and Dirks (1968) obtained similar results.
A low, positive, additive correlation was observed between oil content and grain yield in the C0 of both populations. After nine cycles of mass selection for high oil content a moderate and negative, additive correlation was found in the DS7u populations and a low negative correlation was found in the YuSSSu population. Phenotypic correlations followed the trend for additive correlations. The majority of the studies on ratios between the oil content and grain yield show negative correlation. Misovic and Dumanovic (1990) explained this as arising because of the selection procedure applied in the majority of the breeding programs for high oil content. Namely, selection has been based on either increased oil content or increased oil content per unit weight without any, or almost any, attention paid to kernel weight per se. Such a selection procedure has resulted in increased oil content per unit weight or in the kernel, but at the same time in decreased kernel size. According to the same authors the relationship between grain yield and oil content in maize is still not clear. Many authors have reported correlations between grain yield and oil content (Miller and Brimhall, 1954; Alexander, 1962; Dudley et al., 1974; 1977; and Miller et al., 1981). Most suggested that oil content increases over 8% resulted in reduced grain yield. Saratlic (1994) detected a highly significant and negative correlation (r = -0.99) between the grain oil content and grain yield in the S0 generation of the DS7u population. A great number of conclusions on the relation between the oil content and yield was made on the basis of the IHO-related material and could have been biased, because long-term selection might have reduced genetic variation for all other important agronomic traits except oil content. This is supported by finding positive correlations in the initial cycles of both populations observed in the present study. Alexander and Seif (1963), and Loffland and Quackenbush (1954) found no correlation between these two traits.
Saratlic (1994) found negative and high phenotypic correlations between grain yield and grain moisture, percentage of lodged and broken plants, and cob percent in populations the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, which is not in full agreement with results from the present study. This is explained by the fact that additive correlations are much more precise than phenotypic ones, as they typically have large standard errors. Based on results from nine experiments, Hallauer and Miranda Filho (1988) found an average genetic correlation between grain yield and the cob percentage of 0.10, which agrees with results obtained in this study. Furthermore, the corresponding correlation between the mentioned traits obtained by the same authors was 0.13 in the BSSS population.
CONCLUSION
Changes of means, components of genetic variance, heritability, and additive and phenotypic correlations resulting from using mass selection for high oil content, were observed in the present study.
Nine cycles of mass selection resulted in a significant total increase in oil content of 16.1%, and 12.8% cycle-1 in the DS7u and YuSSSu populations, respectively. Grain yield was significantly reduced in both populations. The percentage of lodged and broken plants and the cob percentage significantly increased significantly in the DS7u population and significantly decreased in the YuSSSu population. Grain moisture content was significantly increased in the DS7u population, but remained the same in the YuSSSu population.
Estimates of additive and dominance variances for grain oil content were highly significant for C0and C9 of DS7u. Only dominance variance showed significance in YuSSSuC0, but it was lost in the course of selection. Additive and dominance variances for grain yield were highly significant in both initial populations. Loss of significance through selection did not occur, but an increased proportion of dominance variance resulted from selection. Estimates of additive variance for the moisture content were highly significant in all populations, while dominance variance was significant only in DS7uC0. The estimate of dominance variance for the percentage of lodged and broken plants was highly significant in the DS7uC9population. Highly significant estimates of additive variances were detected for the cob percent in both populations, while dominance variance was significant in the YuSSSu populations.
High, narrow-sense heritability was found for oil content, grain yield, moisture content and cob percentage in C0 of both populations. Mass selection resulted in increased heritability for oil content and cob percentage in the DS7u population and for the percentage of lodged and broken plants in the YuSSSu population. Narrow-sense heritability for oil content and cob percentage decreased in the YuSSSu population. Moisture content and the percentage of lodged and broken plant heritability decreased in the DS7u population and heritability for grain yield heritability decreased in both populations.
Weak additive correlation was detected between oil content and grain yield (ra = 0.11) in the DS7uC0population. Mass selection affected this correlation and it became moderate and negative in C9 (ra = -0.41). For DS7uC9, the strongest additive correlation was found between oil content and the percentage of lodged and broken plants. A similar situation was observed for the additive correlation between oil content and grain yield in the YuSSSu population. For YuSSSuC9 The strongest additive correlations for YuSSSuC9 were detected between the oil and moisture content (ra = 0.90*) and the oil content and cob percent (ra = 0.81*).
As a general conclusion it can be stated that mass selection for increased oil content was very efficient in both populations. Sufficient additive variance and high estimates of heritability following selection were found only in the DS7u population, hence, this population would be used for future work on increased grain oil content. On the other hand, further work toward increased oil content in the YuSSSu population will be difficult.
Send correspondence to M. Rosulj. Maize Research Institute Zemun Polje, S. Bajica 1, 11185 Zemun Polje, Yugoslavia. Phone: +381 11 3756 704, fax: +381 11 3754 707. E-mail: mrosulj@yahoo.com.
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
12 Mar 2003 -
Date of issue
2002
History
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Accepted
18 Oct 2002 -
Received
13 June 2002