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YIELD STABILITY STUDIES IN SHORT-SEASON MAIZE. I. A DESCRIPTIVE METHOD FOR GROUPING GENOTYPES
603
Citations
6
References
1978
Year
GeneticsAgricultural EconomicsCrop ImprovementYield PredictionCrop VarietiesSustainable AgricultureGenotype–environment InteractionPublic HealthQuantitative GeneticsCrop YieldStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationSuperior GenotypesPopulation GeneticsPlant BreedingEvolutionary BiologyCrop ScienceYield StabilityMedicine
Recent years have seen several methods proposed to identify superior genotypes under genotype–environment interaction. The study proposes an alternative grouping method that classifies genotypes by mean yield and coefficient of variation across environments. Fifteen single‑cross maize hybrids were evaluated in 16 environments from 1969 to 1974, and various statistical stability measures were applied to compare against the proposed grouping approach. The study compares the performance of the proposed grouping method with existing stability techniques.
In recent years, several methods of identifying superior genotypes in the presence of genotype–environment interaction have been proposed. Fifteen single-cross maize hybrids, originating from a 6-inbred diallel of short-season maize, were grown in yield tests over 16 environments from 1969 to 1974. Several statistical methods for measuring yield stability were applied to the data. The problems with these techniques are discussed and an alternative method is proposed, whereby genotypes are grouped on the basis of mean yield and coefficient of variation across environments. Comparisons are made among methods.
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