230-12
The Role of Selection for Hybrid Performance in Diversifying Heterotic Groups.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013: 2:15 PM
Tampa Convention Center, Room 25, First Floor

Collin Lamkey, University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Lincoln, NE and Aaron J. Lorenz, Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE
The establishment of a solid heterotic pattern has been beneficial to maize breeding in North America. It has been shown that genetic divergence between heterotic groups has increased over time, but the relative importance of drift versus selection for hybrid performance on the increased divergence is not known. Reciprocal recurrent selection is a systematic method of selection on hybrid performance, where two populations are selected and improved on the basis of the population-cross performance. The University of Nebraska carried out a replicated recurrent selection program (UNL-RpRS) for eight cycles of selection. Three replicate programs were conducted in parallel for both reciprocal full-sib selection (RFS) and S1-progeny selection. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of selection for hybrid performance on population divergence using the UNL-RpRS as a model system. Genetic divergence among the base populations increased over eight cycles of selection. Divergence was not, however, greater among base populations subjected to RFS compared to S1-progeny selection. Moreover, Fst values among replicate populations within a base population and selection method were as large as Fst values between complimentary populations selected for population cross performance using RFS. We did not find effects of selection for hybrid performance on genome-wide divergence between populations, indicating drift was the predominant force underlying population divergence in the UNL-RpRS.
See more from this Division: C01 Crop Breeding & Genetics
See more from this Session: General Crop Breeding and Genetics: I

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