Electronic Journal of Plant Breeding

Open Access
SCOPUS
  • Year: 2010
  • Volume: 1
  • Issue: 4

Role of secondary and putative traits for improvement of upland rice

  • Author:
  • A. Sheeba, P. Vivekanandan, S. Banumathy, R. Manimaran, G.V. Ramasubramanian
  • Total Page Count: 5
  • DOI:
  • Page Number: 903 to 907

Agricultural College and Research Institute, Killikulam.

Abstract

Even though yield under stress is the primary trait for selection in breeding programmes for drought prone environments, low heritability of yield necessitates an alternative approach such as selection for secondary and putative traits. For a secondary or putative trait to be useful in a breeding programme, it must be genetically correlated with grain yield under stress condition. In the present investigation, single plant yield exhibited positive and significant association with spikelet fertility, panicle harvest index, days to attain 70% RWC, root length, dry root weight and root: shoot ratio. Hence, these traits are to be given importance while selection. Since the traits spikelet fertility and panicle harvest index expressed exact correlation with each other, any one of these two traits may be considered during the selection process. The trait days to attain 70% RWC positively correlated with root traits such as root length, dry root weight and root: shoot ratio suggesting that selection based on days to attain 70% RWC is highly fruitful in developing drought tolerant genotypes as it will bring simultaneous improvement of these traits. Apportioning the correlation coefficients into direct and indirect effects revealed that the traits spikelet fertility, leaf drying and dry root weight had high direct effect with grain yield. The traits days to attain 70% RWC, leaf drying, canopy temperature, drought recovery percentage, dry root weight and root: shoot ratio also showed low to high indirect effect via spikelet fertility. Likewise all traits except days to 50% flowering expressed moderate to high indirect effects via leaf drying and dry root weight. The study indicates that the traits spikelet fertility, leaf drying and dry root weight greatly influenced the grain yield both directly and indirectly and hence these three traits should be given more importance for enhancing grain yield under the drought stress situation.

Keywords

upland rice, drought, secondary and putative traits, association