1. Morphological traits and yield in common bean
- Author
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Leonardo Cunha Melo, José Ângelo Vitorino da Silva, Rogério Pereira de Moraes, Raquel Silva Sousa, Cleber Morais Guimarães, Luis Fernando Stone, Mônica Ferreira de Melo, CLEBER MORAIS GUIMARAES, CNPAF, LUIS FERNANDO STONE, CNPAF, LEONARDO CUNHA MELO, CNPAF, MONICA FERREIRA DE MELO, INSTITUTO FEDERAL GOIANO, Ceres-GO, JOSE ANGELO VITORINO DA SILVA, UNI-ANHANGUERA, RAQUEL SILVA SOUSA, UNI-ANHANGUERA, and ROGERIO PEREIRA DE MORAES, UNI-ANHANGUERA.
- Subjects
Massa foliar especifica ,Características Agronômicas ,Abscission ,Peduncle (anatomy) ,Leaf mass ,Beans ,Abscisão de flores e vagens ,Randomized block design ,Biology ,Leaf area ,Grain weight ,Yield (wine) ,General Environmental Science ,Leaflet (botany) ,Comprimento de racemo e pedúnculo ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Produtividade ,Peduncle ,Horticulture ,Área Foliar ,Raceme ,Phaseolus Vulgaris ,Agronomic traits ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Feijão - Abstract
It is necessary to explore the relationship between yield-related traits to define the appropriate selection procedures to improve bean yield. The relationships between yield and its components have been extensively investigated by common bean breeding programs. However, less attention has been given to morphological and physiological traits. This study evaluates the effects of morphological traits of bean plants on their yield. Forty-one carioca genotypes were evaluated in a randomized block design with three replicates. The abscission of flowers, flower buds, and newly formed pods was monitored and specific leaf mass, leaflet area, average length and thickness of racemes and peduncles, 100-grain weight, number of pods per plant, and yield were determined. Yield responded negatively to increases in raceme and peduncle length and number of pods per plant and positively to increases in peduncle thickness and grain weight. Genotypes differed regarding yield and grain weight and were divided into two groups by the Scott-Knott?s test considering yield. The most productive group showed increased abscission of flowers and newly formed pods, decreased number of pods, and increased grain weight. The most productive genotypes were those that remobilized photoassimilates more easily for having shorter racemes and peduncles, thicker peduncles, and decreased expenditure of structural carbohydrates with malformed pods and other structures required for conditioning grains in the plant, compensating with greater grain weight. Made available in DSpace on 2021-03-26T17:34:15Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 cientifica-2021.pdf: 196641 bytes, checksum: d0f8dd92079a00d7a6e14d4c5793ab77 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2021
- Published
- 2021