Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa

Full-sib families derived from Pool 16 DT, a tropical maize ( Zea mays L.) population, were evaluated in the 1995/96 and 1997/98 dry seasons, using two sites each season in Côte d’Ivoire. In all sites, the crop was irrigated from planting to about 2 weeks before anthesis, irrigation was discontinued...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Badu-Apraku, Baffour, Fakorede, M.A.B., Menkir, A., Kamara, A., Dapaah, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103619
_version_ 1855517424722378752
author Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Menkir, A.
Kamara, A.
Dapaah, S.
author_browse Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Dapaah, S.
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Kamara, A.
Menkir, A.
author_facet Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Menkir, A.
Kamara, A.
Dapaah, S.
author_sort Badu-Apraku, Baffour
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Full-sib families derived from Pool 16 DT, a tropical maize ( Zea mays L.) population, were evaluated in the 1995/96 and 1997/98 dry seasons, using two sites each season in Côte d’Ivoire. In all sites, the crop was irrigated from planting to about 2 weeks before anthesis, irrigation was discontinued thereafter for the rest of the season in one site in 1995 and both sites in 1997. Irrigation was continued till maturity in the second site in 1995. The means and ranges showed that the induced stress environments produced significantly lower grain yield, fewer ears per plant (EPP) and lower grain moisture percentage than the non-stressed site. The coefficients of variation (CVs) associated with the stressed environment were consistently larger than those associated with the non-stressed environment. Similarly, the coefficients of determination (R 2 ) values were generally higher for the non-stressed than the stressed site. Only 7 families were common to the highest-yielding 20 % of the 90 families in each evaluation environment in 1995 and the 7 families were ranked differently in the stressed relative to the non-stressed environments. EPP, plant height (PHT) and ear height (EHT) had consistent positive correlation with grain yield; correlations of days to anthesis and silking date with yield were negative. The induced stress did not properly elicit the true differences among families and may, therefore, need to be modified. We are presently experimenting with a slight modification of the method by irrigating whenever the maize plants start showing signs of temporary wilting such as leaf rolling early in the day.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace103619
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2005
publishDateRange 2005
publishDateSort 2005
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1036192024-05-01T08:15:31Z Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa Badu-Apraku, Baffour Fakorede, M.A.B. Menkir, A. Kamara, A. Dapaah, S. maize zea mays drought tolerance screening methodology cote d'ivoire genetics physiology Full-sib families derived from Pool 16 DT, a tropical maize ( Zea mays L.) population, were evaluated in the 1995/96 and 1997/98 dry seasons, using two sites each season in Côte d’Ivoire. In all sites, the crop was irrigated from planting to about 2 weeks before anthesis, irrigation was discontinued thereafter for the rest of the season in one site in 1995 and both sites in 1997. Irrigation was continued till maturity in the second site in 1995. The means and ranges showed that the induced stress environments produced significantly lower grain yield, fewer ears per plant (EPP) and lower grain moisture percentage than the non-stressed site. The coefficients of variation (CVs) associated with the stressed environment were consistently larger than those associated with the non-stressed environment. Similarly, the coefficients of determination (R 2 ) values were generally higher for the non-stressed than the stressed site. Only 7 families were common to the highest-yielding 20 % of the 90 families in each evaluation environment in 1995 and the 7 families were ranked differently in the stressed relative to the non-stressed environments. EPP, plant height (PHT) and ear height (EHT) had consistent positive correlation with grain yield; correlations of days to anthesis and silking date with yield were negative. The induced stress did not properly elicit the true differences among families and may, therefore, need to be modified. We are presently experimenting with a slight modification of the method by irrigating whenever the maize plants start showing signs of temporary wilting such as leaf rolling early in the day. 2005-06 2019-09-11T12:51:56Z 2019-09-11T12:51:56Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103619 en Limited Access Springer Badu-Apraku, B., Fakorede, M., Menkir, A., Kamara, A. & Dapaah, S. (2005). Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa. Cereal Research Communications, 33(2-3), 533-540.
spellingShingle maize
zea mays
drought tolerance
screening
methodology
cote d'ivoire
genetics
physiology
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Menkir, A.
Kamara, A.
Dapaah, S.
Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa
title Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa
title_full Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa
title_fullStr Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa
title_full_unstemmed Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa
title_short Screening maize for drought tolerance in the Guinea savanna of West and Central Africa
title_sort screening maize for drought tolerance in the guinea savanna of west and central africa
topic maize
zea mays
drought tolerance
screening
methodology
cote d'ivoire
genetics
physiology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103619
work_keys_str_mv AT baduaprakubaffour screeningmaizefordroughttoleranceintheguineasavannaofwestandcentralafrica
AT fakoredemab screeningmaizefordroughttoleranceintheguineasavannaofwestandcentralafrica
AT menkira screeningmaizefordroughttoleranceintheguineasavannaofwestandcentralafrica
AT kamaraa screeningmaizefordroughttoleranceintheguineasavannaofwestandcentralafrica
AT dapaahs screeningmaizefordroughttoleranceintheguineasavannaofwestandcentralafrica