Breeding maize for resistance to ear rot caused by Fusarium moniliforme

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Abstract

Maize ear rots are among the most important impediments to increased maize production in Egypt. The present research was conducted to estimate combining abilities, heterosis and correlation coefficients for resistance to ear rot disease in seven corn inbred lines and their 21 crosses under field conditions. Results demonstrated that both additive and non-additive gene actions were responsible for the genetic expression of all characters with the preponderance of non-additive actions for days to 50% silking. The parental line L51 was the best combiner for earliness, low infection severity %, high phenols content, short plants and reasonable grain yield, while L101 was good combiner for low ear rot infection only. The cross: L122×L84, L122×L101, L51×L101,L76×L36,L76×L84,L36×L84,L36×L81 andL36×L101 which involved one or both parents withgood General Combining Ability (GCA) effects expressed useful significant heterosis and Specific Combining Ability (SCA) effects for low infection severity %, high phenol contents, early silking, tall plants and high grain yield. Phenotypic and genotypic correlation coefficients suggest that selection for resistance to ear rot should identify lines with high yielding ability, early silking, tall plants, high phenols content and chitinase activity. © 2012 Asian Network for Scientific Information.

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APA

Hefny, M., Attaa, S., Bayoumi, T., Ammar, S., & El-Bramawy, M. (2012). Breeding maize for resistance to ear rot caused by Fusarium moniliforme. Pakistan Journal of Biological Sciences, 15(2), 78–84. https://doi.org/10.3923/pjbs.2012.78.84

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