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Investigation of morphoagronomic performance and selection indices in the international safflower panel for breeding perspectives.

Authors :
ALI, Fawad
YILMAZ, Abdurrahim
CHAUDHARY, Hassan Javed
NADEEM, Muhammad Azhar
RABBANI, Malik Ashiq
ARSLAN, Yusuf
NAWAZ, Muhammad Amjad
HABYARIMANA, Ephrem
BALOCH, Faheem Shehzad
Source :
Turkish Journal of Agriculture & Forestry. 2020, Vol. 44 Issue 2, p103-120. 18p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Developing high yielding safflower cultivars with good adaptation to diverse environmental conditions can improve production in terms of seed yield and reduce the deficiency in edible oil. The genetic variability that exists among and within populations for desirable agronomic traits can be used to develop elite cultivars. A total of 94 safflower accessions from 26 different countries were used in this study to evaluate morphoagronomic performance, determine the pattern of similarity centers, and identify the best performing accessions by conducting 2 field experiments in Pakistan and Turkey using augmented design. Genetic diversity for important yield and yield traits was described including capitulum diameter (17.30 to 28.30 mm), branches per plant (5.10 to 17.30), capitula per plant (8.70 to 80.40), and seed yield per plant (4.86 to 51.02 g). These analyses showed a good level of variation in the current study. Using principal component analysis, it was observed that days to flower initiation, days to 50% flowering, days to flower completion, seed yield per plant, capitula per plant, branches per plant, seeds per capitulum, and capitulum diameter were the major contributors to the observed genetic variability in the evaluated safflower panel. Seed yield per plant reflected a significant and positive correlation with capitula per plant, branches per plant, and capitulum diameter, and these traits can be suggested as a selection criterion in safflower breeding programs. The hierarchical clustering was in agreement with the patterns of 7 similarity centers based on seed yield per plant, capitula per plant, capitulum diameter, and branches per plant. During this study, a few promising safflower accessions were selected for future breeding programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1300011X
Volume :
44
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Turkish Journal of Agriculture & Forestry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142594288
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3906/tar-1902-49