Inheritance of late flowering in natural variants of soybean cultivars under short-day conditions

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Abstract

The objective of this work was to determine the inheritance of the long juvenile period trait in natural variants of the Doko, BR 9 (Savana), Davis, Embrapa 1 (IAS 5RC), and BR 16 soybean cultivars. Complete diallel crosses were made between the Doko and BR 16 cultivars and their variants. A 3:1 segregation ratio was observed in the F2 populations of the 'Doko' x Doko-18T, 'Doko' x Doko-Milionária, 'Davis' x São Carlos, and 'BR 9 (Savana)' x MABR92-836 (Savanão) crosses, indicating that the long juvenile period trait is controlled by a pair of recessive genes. The difference in late flowering between the Doko cultivar and both of its variants was caused by a recessive spontaneous mutation at the same genetic locus. However, the variants Doko-18T and Doko-Milionária are identical mutants that share a pair of genes that control the long juvenile period under short-day conditions. These mutants can be used in breeding programs to develop cultivars adapted to low-latitude tropical regions.

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Carpentieri-Pipolo, V., de Almeida, L. A., Kiihl, R. A. de S., & Pagliosa, E. S. (2014). Inheritance of late flowering in natural variants of soybean cultivars under short-day conditions. Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira, 49(10), 796–803. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X2014001000006

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