Potential for improvement by selection for reducing sugar content after cold storage for three potato populations
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Theoretical and Applied Genetics
- Vol. 88 (6-7) , 678-684
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01253970
Abstract
The objectives of this study were to examine the expected response to selection for reducing-sugar content after cold storage in three hybrid populations, to determine whether these populations included clones low in reducing sugars, and to investigate the effectiveness of indirect selection for chip colour based on selection of sugar content after cold storage. The three hybrid populations included: a random sample of 39 clones of Population 1, which was derived from crossing ND860-2 (a clone low in reducing sugars) with F58089 (a clone intermediate in reducing sugars); 40 clones of Population 2, which was obtained from crossing ND860-2 with Russette (a clone high in reducing sugars); and 40 clones of Population 3, which was derived from crossing Russette with F58089. Sugar content and chip colour were assessed in tubers stored for 2 months at 4 °C at Cambridge, Ontario, and at 3 °C at Benton Ridge, New Brunswick. Population 1 had a slightly greater predicted response to selection for reduction in glucose and total reducing sugars than the other two populations. This could be attributed to higher heritability estimates for Population 1, which was a reflection of smaller clone × environment interaction mean squares. The greater potential advance by selection for fructose, glucose, and total reducing sugars, was a direct consequence of its lower means for these traits. Low reducing-sugar clones were found in all three populations, indicating their potential use for the selection of low reducing sugars. Populations 2 and 3, however, would require stronger selection pressures and, therefore, large population sizes. Expected correlated responses for chip colour by selection for fructose and glucose were similar to, and sometimes exceeded, the expected direct responses in all three populations. Indirect responses for chip colour by selection for sucrose, however, were lower than direct selection responses. These results indicate that indirect selection for chip colour, by selection for either fructose or glucose content after cold storage, is as effective as direct selection for chip colour.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Respiratory Enzyme Activity in Low Temperature Sweetening of Susceptible and Resistant PotatoesJournal of Food Science, 1990
- Reducing sugar accumulation in progeny families of cold chipping potato clonesAmerican Journal of Potato Research, 1990
- Contribution of Sucrose to Nonenzymatic Browning in Potato ChipsJournal of Food Science, 1989
- A new procedure to construct confidence intervals for genotypic variance and expected response to selectionGenome, 1989
- Effect of Low Temperature Storage on Sugar Concentrations and Chip Color of Certain Processing Potato Cultivars and SelectionsJournal of Food Science, 1987
- Influence of Reducing Sugars and Amino Acids in the Color Development of Fried PotatoesJournal of Food Science, 1986
- Russette: A Russet-skin potato variety, combining high quality, high yields, and adaptation to the Northeastern states and FloridaAmerican Journal of Potato Research, 1984
- HPLC Determination of Fructose, Glucose, and Sucrose in PotatoesJournal of Food Science, 1981
- On Augmented DesignsPublished by JSTOR ,1975
- Potato utilization in relation to variety (Heredity) and environmentAmerican Journal of Potato Research, 1954