Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations

Most maize production across the globe is rain-fed, and production is set to be negatively impacted as duration and occurrence of droughts increases due to climate change. Development of water-deficit tolerant maize germplasm has been a major focus for most breeding programmes. Here, we sought to as...

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Autores principales: Musimwa, Tatenda R., Molnar, Terence Luke, Dutta, Somak, Dhliwayo, Thanda, Trachsel, Samuel, Lee, Michael
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126526
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author Musimwa, Tatenda R.
Molnar, Terence Luke
Dutta, Somak
Dhliwayo, Thanda
Trachsel, Samuel
Lee, Michael
author_browse Dhliwayo, Thanda
Dutta, Somak
Lee, Michael
Molnar, Terence Luke
Musimwa, Tatenda R.
Trachsel, Samuel
author_facet Musimwa, Tatenda R.
Molnar, Terence Luke
Dutta, Somak
Dhliwayo, Thanda
Trachsel, Samuel
Lee, Michael
author_sort Musimwa, Tatenda R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Most maize production across the globe is rain-fed, and production is set to be negatively impacted as duration and occurrence of droughts increases due to climate change. Development of water-deficit tolerant maize germplasm has been a major focus for most breeding programmes. Here, we sought to assess the genetic gain for grain yield in two maize populations developed for drought tolerance at CIMMYT by evaluating their cycle progeny through hybrid performance. Inbreds derived from different cycles of the Drought Tolerant Population (DTP) and La Posta Sequia (LPS) were mated to a tester (CML550), and resulting hybrids were evaluated under managed water-deficit stress and well-watered conditions. The difference in yield between water-deficit and well-watered treatments was 27% and 36% for the DTP and LPS, respectively. Genetic gain for grain yield across cycles for the two populations was confirmed in the study. Genetic gain was observed for both treatments indicating that selection for water-deficit stress tolerance simultaneously improves grain yield in well-watered conditions. The DTP population had a genetic gain of 0.07 t ha−1 cycle−1, while the LPS had 0.16 t ha−1 cycle−1 under water-deficit conditions. Significant genetic gain was also observed in the well-watered treatments for both populations. Anthesis to silking interval was significantly reduced under water-deficit stress conditions in both populations. Plant and ear height were reduced in the LPS population in both treatments, while no reductions were observed for the trait in the DTP population. Potential water-deficit stress tolerance donor lines with yields comparable to commercial check varieties were identified.
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spelling CGSpace1265262025-11-06T13:04:13Z Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations Musimwa, Tatenda R. Molnar, Terence Luke Dutta, Somak Dhliwayo, Thanda Trachsel, Samuel Lee, Michael drought tolerance water maize climate change genetic gain Most maize production across the globe is rain-fed, and production is set to be negatively impacted as duration and occurrence of droughts increases due to climate change. Development of water-deficit tolerant maize germplasm has been a major focus for most breeding programmes. Here, we sought to assess the genetic gain for grain yield in two maize populations developed for drought tolerance at CIMMYT by evaluating their cycle progeny through hybrid performance. Inbreds derived from different cycles of the Drought Tolerant Population (DTP) and La Posta Sequia (LPS) were mated to a tester (CML550), and resulting hybrids were evaluated under managed water-deficit stress and well-watered conditions. The difference in yield between water-deficit and well-watered treatments was 27% and 36% for the DTP and LPS, respectively. Genetic gain for grain yield across cycles for the two populations was confirmed in the study. Genetic gain was observed for both treatments indicating that selection for water-deficit stress tolerance simultaneously improves grain yield in well-watered conditions. The DTP population had a genetic gain of 0.07 t ha−1 cycle−1, while the LPS had 0.16 t ha−1 cycle−1 under water-deficit conditions. Significant genetic gain was also observed in the well-watered treatments for both populations. Anthesis to silking interval was significantly reduced under water-deficit stress conditions in both populations. Plant and ear height were reduced in the LPS population in both treatments, while no reductions were observed for the trait in the DTP population. Potential water-deficit stress tolerance donor lines with yields comparable to commercial check varieties were identified. 2023-02 2023-01-04T08:00:35Z 2023-01-04T08:00:35Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126526 en Open Access application/pdf Wiley Musimwa, T. R., Molnar, T. L., Dutta, S., Dhliwayo, T., Trachsel, S., & Lee, M. (2022). Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi‐tropical maize populations. Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science, 209(1), 71–82. Portico. https://doi.org/10.1111/jac.12592
spellingShingle drought tolerance
water
maize
climate change
genetic gain
Musimwa, Tatenda R.
Molnar, Terence Luke
Dutta, Somak
Dhliwayo, Thanda
Trachsel, Samuel
Lee, Michael
Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations
title Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations
title_full Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations
title_fullStr Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations
title_full_unstemmed Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations
title_short Phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi-tropical maize populations
title_sort phenotypic assessment of genetic gain from selection for improved drought tolerance in semi tropical maize populations
topic drought tolerance
water
maize
climate change
genetic gain
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126526
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