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Development of a statistical crop model to explain the relationship between seed yield and phenotypic diversity within the Brassica napus Genepool

Bennett, Emma J.; Brignell, Christopher J.; Carion, Pierre W.C.; Cook, Samantha M.; Eastmond, Peter J.; Teakle, Graham R.; Hammond, John P.; Love, Clare; King, Graham J.; Roberts, Jeremy A.; Wagstaff, Carol

Development of a statistical crop model to explain the relationship between seed yield and phenotypic diversity within the Brassica napus Genepool Thumbnail


Authors

Emma J. Bennett

Pierre W.C. Carion

Samantha M. Cook

Peter J. Eastmond

Graham R. Teakle

John P. Hammond

Clare Love

Graham J. King

Jeremy A. Roberts

Carol Wagstaff



Abstract

Plants are extremely versatile organisms that respond to the environment in which they find themselves, but a large part of their development is under genetic regulation. The links between developmental parameters and yield are poorly understood in oilseed rape; understanding this relationship will help growers to predict their yields more accurately and breeders to focus on traits that may lead to yield improvements. To determine the relationship between seed yield and other agronomic traits, we investigated the natural variation that already exists with regards to resource allocation in 37 lines of the crop species Brassica napus. Over 130 different traits were assessed; they included seed yield parameters, seed composition, leaf mineral analysis, rates of pod and leaf senescence and plant architecture traits. A stepwise regression analysis was used to model statistically the measured traits with seed yield per plant. Above-ground biomass and protein content together accounted for 94.36% of the recorded variation. The primary raceme area, which was highly correlated with yield parameters (0.65), provides an early indicator of potential yield. The pod and leaf photosynthetic and senescence parameters measured had only a limited influence on seed yield and were not correlated with each other, indicating that reproductive development is not necessarily driving the senescence process within field-grown B. napus. Assessing the diversity that exists within the B. napus gene pool has highlighted architectural, seed and mineral composition traits that should be targeted in breeding programmes through the development of linked markers to improve crop yields.

Citation

Bennett, E. J., Brignell, C. J., Carion, P. W., Cook, S. M., Eastmond, P. J., Teakle, G. R., …Wagstaff, C. (2017). Development of a statistical crop model to explain the relationship between seed yield and phenotypic diversity within the Brassica napus Genepool. Agronomy, 7(2), Article 31. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy7020031

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 19, 2017
Publication Date Apr 22, 2017
Deposit Date Jul 6, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jul 6, 2017
Journal Agronomy
Electronic ISSN 2073-4395
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 7
Issue 2
Article Number 31
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy7020031
Keywords oilseed rape; statistical crop model; plant development; yield; seed composition
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/857010
Publisher URL http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/7/2/31

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