GENE EFFECTS IN CORN (ZEA MAYSL.): I. SEPARATION AND RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF GENE EFFECTS FOR YIELD
- 1 April 1962
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Plant Science
- Vol. 42 (2) , 339-348
- https://doi.org/10.4141/cjps62-048
Abstract
A procedure is outlined for the separation, into six parameters, of gene effects affecting genetic variation of a quantitative trait. These parameters represent mean effects, additive and dominance gene effects, and the three types of digenic epistatic effects. Estimates of the parameters are obtained using the population means of two inbred lines, their cross, and descendants due to subsequent selfing and crossing. The relative importance of the different gene effects can be evaluated from the magnitude and significance of the estimates.Population means of six inbred lines of corn, and all possible F1, F2, P1F1, and P2F1crosses among them, were used to obtain estimates of the various gene effects for yield of shelled corn. Mean yield performance of the populations was obtained from four experiments grown at two locations in each of 2 years.With regard to the 15 crosses, the estimates of gene effects indicate that the dominance gene effects were quite important in the inheritance of yield. Estimates of additive gene effects were of low magnitude and many were non-significant. Epistatic gene effects were considered to be more important than additive gene effects in the inheritance of yield in the crosses studied. The additive × additive and additive × dominance gene effects were relatively more important than the dominance × dominance effects.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The separation of epistatic from additive and dominance variation in generation means. IIGenetica, 1960
- The separation of epistatic from additive and dominance variation in generation meansHeredity, 1958
- A survey of the genetical basis of heterosis in a variety of diallel crossesHeredity, 1955
- The Description of Genic Interactions in Continuous VariationPublished by JSTOR ,1955
- PROBLEMS IN THE ESTIMATION AND UTILIZATION OF GENETIC VARIABILITYCold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1955
- AN EXTENSION OF THE CONCEPT OF PARTITIONING HEREDITARY VARIANCE FOR ANALYSIS OF COVARIANCES AMONG RELATIVES WHEN EPISTASIS IS PRESENTGenetics, 1954
- A Comparison of Variance Components in Corn Yield Trials: II. Error, Year x Variety, Location x Variety, and Variety Components1Agronomy Journal, 1951
- Estimates of Heritability and the Degree of Dominance in Corn1Agronomy Journal, 1949
- A Breeding Procedure Designed To Make Maximum Use of Both General and Specific Combining Ability1Agronomy Journal, 1949
- XV.—The Correlation between Relatives on the Supposition of Mendelian Inheritance.Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1919