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Genome-based prediction of agronomic traits in spring wheat under conventional and organic management systems.

Authors :
Semagn, Kassa
Iqbal, Muhammad
Crossa, José
Jarquin, Diego
Howard, Reka
Chen, Hua
Bemister, Darcy H.
Beres, Brian L.
Randhawa, Harpinder
N'Diaye, Amidou
Pozniak, Curtis
Spaner, Dean
Source :
Theoretical & Applied Genetics; Feb2022, Vol. 135 Issue 2, p537-552, 16p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Key message: Using phenotype data of three spring wheat populations evaluated at 6–15 environments under two management systems, we found moderate to very high prediction accuracies across seven traits. The phenotype data collected under an organic management system effectively predicted the performance of lines in the conventional management and vice versa. There is growing interest in developing wheat cultivars specifically for organic agriculture, but we are not aware of the effect of organic management on the predictive ability of genomic selection (GS). Here, we evaluated within populations prediction accuracies of four GS models, four combinations of training and testing sets, three reaction norm models, and three random cross-validations (CV) schemes in three populations phenotyped under organic and conventional management systems. Our study was based on a total of 578 recombinant inbred lines and varieties from three spring wheat populations, which were evaluated for seven traits at 3–9 conventionally and 3–6 organically managed field environments and genotyped either with the wheat 90 K SNP array or DArTseq. We predicted the management systems (CV0<subscript>M</subscript>) or environments (CV0), a subset of lines that have been evaluated in either management (CV2<subscript>M</subscript>) or some environments (CV2), and the performance of newly developed lines in either management (CV1<subscript>M</subscript>) or environments (CV1). The average prediction accuracies of the model that incorporated genotype × environment interactions with CV0 and CV2 schemes varied from 0.69 to 0.97. In the CV1 and CV1M schemes, prediction accuracies ranged from − 0.12 to 0.77 depending on the reaction norm models, the traits, and populations. In most cases, grain protein showed the highest prediction accuracies. The phenotype data collected under the organic management effectively predicted the performance of lines under conventional management and vice versa. This is the first comprehensive GS study that investigated the effect of the organic management system in wheat. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00405752
Volume :
135
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Theoretical & Applied Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155396479
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00122-021-03982-0