Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm

Maize (Zea mays L.) landraces in the northern Guinea savanna and Sudan savanna in West and Central Africa appear to have some drought-adaptive traits. This study was initiated to assess the level of improvement in yield potential and other agronomic traits achieved under drought stress (DS) and in m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Meseka, S.K., Fakorede, M.A.B., Ajala, S., Badu-Apraku, Baffour, Menkir, A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Informa UK Limited 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76027
_version_ 1855535134404509696
author Meseka, S.K.
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Ajala, S.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Menkir, A.
author_browse Ajala, S.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Menkir, A.
Meseka, S.K.
author_facet Meseka, S.K.
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Ajala, S.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Menkir, A.
author_sort Meseka, S.K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Maize (Zea mays L.) landraces in the northern Guinea savanna and Sudan savanna in West and Central Africa appear to have some drought-adaptive traits. This study was initiated to assess the level of improvement in yield potential and other agronomic traits achieved under drought stress (DS) and in multiple locations (ML) after introgression of alleles from maize landraces into an elite maize variety (AK9443-DMRSR) via backcrossing. Six backcross (BC) populations together with recurrent parent (AK9443-DMRSR), a commercial hybrid (Oba Super-II), and an improved variety (TZLCOMP4C1) were evaluated under controlled DS and full irrigation (FI) during the dry seasons of 1999 and 2000, as well as in seven ML trials. No significant differences were observed among genotypes for grain yield and most of the traits measured under DS and FI. Significant differences were recorded among genotypes for grain yield and other agronomic traits measured in ML and across 11 environments. Drought stress reduced grain yields of the BC1F2 populations by 64% and recurrent parent by 71%. In ML trials, at least half of the populations were better than recurrent parent. The top three BC1F2 populations produced more grains than the recurrent parent (258–360 kg/ha) and Oba Super-II (555–657 kg/ha) with introgression of only 25% genome of the landraces. We concluded that backcross procedure was able to transfer a quantitative trait of grain yield of an elite recurrent parent into maize landraces. Additional backcross generations are needed for improved performance of the BC1F2 populations in drought-prone environments.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace76027
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2013
publishDateRange 2013
publishDateSort 2013
publisher Informa UK Limited
publisherStr Informa UK Limited
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace760272023-09-29T14:16:16Z Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm Meseka, S.K. Fakorede, M.A.B. Ajala, S. Badu-Apraku, Baffour Menkir, A. drought tolerance maize germplasm introgression backcrossing Maize (Zea mays L.) landraces in the northern Guinea savanna and Sudan savanna in West and Central Africa appear to have some drought-adaptive traits. This study was initiated to assess the level of improvement in yield potential and other agronomic traits achieved under drought stress (DS) and in multiple locations (ML) after introgression of alleles from maize landraces into an elite maize variety (AK9443-DMRSR) via backcrossing. Six backcross (BC) populations together with recurrent parent (AK9443-DMRSR), a commercial hybrid (Oba Super-II), and an improved variety (TZLCOMP4C1) were evaluated under controlled DS and full irrigation (FI) during the dry seasons of 1999 and 2000, as well as in seven ML trials. No significant differences were observed among genotypes for grain yield and most of the traits measured under DS and FI. Significant differences were recorded among genotypes for grain yield and other agronomic traits measured in ML and across 11 environments. Drought stress reduced grain yields of the BC1F2 populations by 64% and recurrent parent by 71%. In ML trials, at least half of the populations were better than recurrent parent. The top three BC1F2 populations produced more grains than the recurrent parent (258–360 kg/ha) and Oba Super-II (555–657 kg/ha) with introgression of only 25% genome of the landraces. We concluded that backcross procedure was able to transfer a quantitative trait of grain yield of an elite recurrent parent into maize landraces. Additional backcross generations are needed for improved performance of the BC1F2 populations in drought-prone environments. 2013-01 2016-07-11T08:41:24Z 2016-07-11T08:41:24Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76027 en Limited Access Informa UK Limited Meseka, S., Fakorede, M., Ajala, S., Badu-Apraku, B., & Menkir, A. (2013). Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm. Journal of Crop Improvement, 27(1), 96-112.
spellingShingle drought tolerance
maize
germplasm
introgression
backcrossing
Meseka, S.K.
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Ajala, S.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Menkir, A.
Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm
title Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm
title_full Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm
title_fullStr Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm
title_full_unstemmed Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm
title_short Introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm
title_sort introgression of alleles from maize landraces to improve drought tolerance in an adapted germplasm
topic drought tolerance
maize
germplasm
introgression
backcrossing
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76027
work_keys_str_mv AT mesekask introgressionofallelesfrommaizelandracestoimprovedroughttoleranceinanadaptedgermplasm
AT fakoredemab introgressionofallelesfrommaizelandracestoimprovedroughttoleranceinanadaptedgermplasm
AT ajalas introgressionofallelesfrommaizelandracestoimprovedroughttoleranceinanadaptedgermplasm
AT baduaprakubaffour introgressionofallelesfrommaizelandracestoimprovedroughttoleranceinanadaptedgermplasm
AT menkira introgressionofallelesfrommaizelandracestoimprovedroughttoleranceinanadaptedgermplasm