Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria

The harvest index (HI), which is the ratio of the economic yield to the aboveground plant biomass, is an important trait to assess progress in improving yield potential. Therefore, a study was carried out to examine the assimilate partitioning of nine Musa hybrids along with a local check for two cr...

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Main Authors: Baiyeri, K.P., Tenkouano, A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Informa UK Limited 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90928
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author Baiyeri, K.P.
Tenkouano, A.
author_browse Baiyeri, K.P.
Tenkouano, A.
author_facet Baiyeri, K.P.
Tenkouano, A.
author_sort Baiyeri, K.P.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The harvest index (HI), which is the ratio of the economic yield to the aboveground plant biomass, is an important trait to assess progress in improving yield potential. Therefore, a study was carried out to examine the assimilate partitioning of nine Musa hybrids along with a local check for two cropping cycles. Highly significant (P < 0.01) genotype effects were found for all the measured components of yield. Most hybrids displayed HI values that were twice as large as that of the local check, indicating a greater efficiency of hybrids in assimilate partitioning. Genotype-by-cropping cycle interaction for HI was significant, suggesting that resource availability during the two cropping cycles influenced assimilate-partitioning pattern. Correlation coefficients between bunch weight and plant biomass, and between bunch weight and number of fruits per bunch were positive, high and significant. Also, positive and high correlation coefficient was obtained between bunch weight and HI. Furthermore, path coefficient analysis revealed that the direct effects of plant biomass and HI were high; however, the direct effect of number of fruits per bunch was insignificant; rather, its contribution to bunch weight was through an indirect effect via plant biomass. The high direct effect of HI on bunch weight suggested that further yield increase in Musa germplasm is possible by selecting for high HI. But a low and non-significant relationship between plant biomass and HI suggested that increase in yield could be achieved without a proportional increase in biomass.
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spelling CGSpace909282024-05-15T05:11:45Z Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria Baiyeri, K.P. Tenkouano, A. sink-source relationship musa hybrids yield harvest index plant biomass germplasm photo assimilates genotypes The harvest index (HI), which is the ratio of the economic yield to the aboveground plant biomass, is an important trait to assess progress in improving yield potential. Therefore, a study was carried out to examine the assimilate partitioning of nine Musa hybrids along with a local check for two cropping cycles. Highly significant (P < 0.01) genotype effects were found for all the measured components of yield. Most hybrids displayed HI values that were twice as large as that of the local check, indicating a greater efficiency of hybrids in assimilate partitioning. Genotype-by-cropping cycle interaction for HI was significant, suggesting that resource availability during the two cropping cycles influenced assimilate-partitioning pattern. Correlation coefficients between bunch weight and plant biomass, and between bunch weight and number of fruits per bunch were positive, high and significant. Also, positive and high correlation coefficient was obtained between bunch weight and HI. Furthermore, path coefficient analysis revealed that the direct effects of plant biomass and HI were high; however, the direct effect of number of fruits per bunch was insignificant; rather, its contribution to bunch weight was through an indirect effect via plant biomass. The high direct effect of HI on bunch weight suggested that further yield increase in Musa germplasm is possible by selecting for high HI. But a low and non-significant relationship between plant biomass and HI suggested that increase in yield could be achieved without a proportional increase in biomass. 2008-01-08 2018-02-06T12:15:25Z 2018-02-06T12:15:25Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90928 en Limited Access Informa UK Limited Baiyeri, K.P. & Tenkouano, A. (2008). Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten Musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a sub-humid environment of Nigeria. Journal of Crop Improvement, 21(1), 27-40.
spellingShingle sink-source relationship
musa hybrids
yield
harvest index
plant biomass
germplasm
photo assimilates
genotypes
Baiyeri, K.P.
Tenkouano, A.
Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria
title Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria
title_full Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria
title_fullStr Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria
title_short Variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of Nigeria
title_sort variability in agricultural and biological yields of ten musa genotypes evaluated for two cropping cycles in a subhumid environment of nigeria
topic sink-source relationship
musa hybrids
yield
harvest index
plant biomass
germplasm
photo assimilates
genotypes
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90928
work_keys_str_mv AT baiyerikp variabilityinagriculturalandbiologicalyieldsoftenmusagenotypesevaluatedfortwocroppingcyclesinasubhumidenvironmentofnigeria
AT tenkouanoa variabilityinagriculturalandbiologicalyieldsoftenmusagenotypesevaluatedfortwocroppingcyclesinasubhumidenvironmentofnigeria