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Relationships between hard‐seededness and seed weight in mungbean (<i>Vigna radiata)</i> assessed by QTL analysis
70
Citations
10
References
2005
Year
BotanyGeneticsVigna RadiataAgricultural EconomicsQtl AnalysisCrop ImprovementApplied GeneticsCrop QualityAbstract Weather DamageMolecular EcologyCrop EstablishmentPublic HealthSeed Weight QtlQuantitative GeneticsStatistical GeneticsMolecular BreedingGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsPlant BreedingBiologyEvolutionary BiologyCrop ProtectionCrop ScienceSeed WeightMedicine
Abstract Weather damage reduces the value of commercial mungbean. but hard‐seededness can reduce the level of damage. However. attempts lo breed large‐ and hard‐seeded mungbean varieties have been unsuccessful. To understand the relationship between seed weight and hard‐seededness. these trails were investigated using a quantitative trail loci (QTL) mapping approach with a recombinant inbred population derived from a cross between a completely soft‐seeded variety and a completely hard‐seeded genotype. The two parental genotypes also had a sixfold difference in seed weight. QTL analyses revealed four loci for hard‐seededness and 11 loci for seed weight. Two of the hard‐seeded ness loci co‐localized with seed weight QTL. When seed weight was used as a covariate in the analysis of hard‐seededness from the field data, two of the four hard‐seeded QTL remained significant with the effect al one of these remaining unchanged. These results explain why retaining hard‐seededness in large seeded mungbean lines has been unsuccessful. The existence of a persistent locus, however. indicated that breeding large and persistently hard‐seeded varieties of mungbean may be possible.
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