Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean

The environment substantially affects the performance of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) genotypes in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). Therefore, stability analysis can be used to select stable, high-yielding genotypes. Nine open-pollinated and six hybrid tomato genotypes and the most representative local tomato cultivar were evaluated at 20 LAC locations. Each cultivar's yield stability was quantified using the regression of individual genotype's yield on the environmental index, which was measured by the mean of all the genotypes grown in an environment. A high-yielding and stable tomato cultivar had a mean yield higher than the general mean, b1 (coefficient of regression) = 1,Sd(2) (deviation from linearity) = 0, and r2 (coefficient of determination) > 0.50. 'Narita' (hybrid) and 'Dina RPs' (open-pollinated) were the most stable genotypes for marketable-fruit yield in LAC. 'Flora Dade', an open-pollinated genotype that is grown widely in LAC had unstable marketable-fruit yield. Neither heterogenous composition of an open-pollinated genotype nor heterozygosity per se of the hybrids could explain the yield stability achievement across environments. Therefore, alleles that confer broader adaptation might be required to achieve tomato yield stability across environments. Hence, it is possible to select for yield stability in tomato.

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Auteurs principaux: Ortiz, R., Izquierdo, J.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Langue:English
Publié: 1994
Sujets:genotypes, yields, hybrids, markets,
Accès en ligne:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100929
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1009292023-02-15T06:58:37Z Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean Ortiz, R. Izquierdo, J. genotypes yields hybrids markets The environment substantially affects the performance of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) genotypes in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). Therefore, stability analysis can be used to select stable, high-yielding genotypes. Nine open-pollinated and six hybrid tomato genotypes and the most representative local tomato cultivar were evaluated at 20 LAC locations. Each cultivar's yield stability was quantified using the regression of individual genotype's yield on the environmental index, which was measured by the mean of all the genotypes grown in an environment. A high-yielding and stable tomato cultivar had a mean yield higher than the general mean, b1 (coefficient of regression) = 1,Sd(2) (deviation from linearity) = 0, and r2 (coefficient of determination) > 0.50. 'Narita' (hybrid) and 'Dina RPs' (open-pollinated) were the most stable genotypes for marketable-fruit yield in LAC. 'Flora Dade', an open-pollinated genotype that is grown widely in LAC had unstable marketable-fruit yield. Neither heterogenous composition of an open-pollinated genotype nor heterozygosity per se of the hybrids could explain the yield stability achievement across environments. Therefore, alleles that confer broader adaptation might be required to achieve tomato yield stability across environments. Hence, it is possible to select for yield stability in tomato. 1994 2019-04-24T12:29:36Z 2019-04-24T12:29:36Z Journal Article Ortiz, R. & Izquierdo, J. (1994). Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and the Caribbean. HortScience, 29(10), 1175-1177. 0018-5345 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100929 en Limited Access
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic genotypes
yields
hybrids
markets
genotypes
yields
hybrids
markets
spellingShingle genotypes
yields
hybrids
markets
genotypes
yields
hybrids
markets
Ortiz, R.
Izquierdo, J.
Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean
description The environment substantially affects the performance of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) genotypes in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). Therefore, stability analysis can be used to select stable, high-yielding genotypes. Nine open-pollinated and six hybrid tomato genotypes and the most representative local tomato cultivar were evaluated at 20 LAC locations. Each cultivar's yield stability was quantified using the regression of individual genotype's yield on the environmental index, which was measured by the mean of all the genotypes grown in an environment. A high-yielding and stable tomato cultivar had a mean yield higher than the general mean, b1 (coefficient of regression) = 1,Sd(2) (deviation from linearity) = 0, and r2 (coefficient of determination) > 0.50. 'Narita' (hybrid) and 'Dina RPs' (open-pollinated) were the most stable genotypes for marketable-fruit yield in LAC. 'Flora Dade', an open-pollinated genotype that is grown widely in LAC had unstable marketable-fruit yield. Neither heterogenous composition of an open-pollinated genotype nor heterozygosity per se of the hybrids could explain the yield stability achievement across environments. Therefore, alleles that confer broader adaptation might be required to achieve tomato yield stability across environments. Hence, it is possible to select for yield stability in tomato.
format Journal Article
topic_facet genotypes
yields
hybrids
markets
author Ortiz, R.
Izquierdo, J.
author_facet Ortiz, R.
Izquierdo, J.
author_sort Ortiz, R.
title Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean
title_short Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean
title_full Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean
title_fullStr Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean
title_full_unstemmed Yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in Latin America and Caribbean
title_sort yield stability of hybrid and open pollinated tomato cultivars in latin america and caribbean
publishDate 1994
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100929
work_keys_str_mv AT ortizr yieldstabilityofhybridandopenpollinatedtomatocultivarsinlatinamericaandcaribbean
AT izquierdoj yieldstabilityofhybridandopenpollinatedtomatocultivarsinlatinamericaandcaribbean
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