Yield of photoperiod-sensitive sorghum hybrids based on Guinea-race germplasm under farmers' field conditions in Mali

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Abstract

The first sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.)Moench] hybrids based on West African Guinea-racederived parents were created to enhance farmer's food security and income through increased yields. To assess their performance, eight hybrids, six experimental pure-line cultivars, one pure-line check (Lata), and a highly adapted landrace cultivar (Tieble) were evaluated in 27 farmer-managed and two on-station yield trials in Mali, West Africa, from 2009 to 2011. The hybrids were confirmed to have photoperiod sensitivity similar to the well-adapted Guinea landrace check cultivar. Genotypic differences for on-farm grain yield were highly significant and genotype × environment crossover interactions were limited. The yield superiorities of individual hybrids, relative to the landrace check, ranged from 17 to 37% over the 27 on-farm trials. The three top yielding hybrids showed 30% yield advantages across productivity levels, with absolute yield advantages averaging 380 kg ha-1 under lower (1.0-1.5 t ha-1) and 660 kg ha-1 under higher (2.0-3.5 t ha-1) productivity conditions. A mean male-parent (better parent) heterosis of 26% was observed for the four hybrids having Lata as a male parent. As the hybrids studied here were obtained with a low intensity of selection using a limited number of parents, even greater yield superiorities may be attained with development of distinct parental pools and scaled-up hybrid breeding. © Crop Science Society of America.

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Rattunde, H. F. W., Weltzien, E., Diallo, B., Diallo, A. G., Sidibe, M., Touré, A. O., … Touré, A. (2013). Yield of photoperiod-sensitive sorghum hybrids based on Guinea-race germplasm under farmers’ field conditions in Mali. Crop Science, 53(6), 2454–2461. https://doi.org/10.2135/cropsci2013.03.0182

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