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CAUSE AND EFFECT ESTIMATES FOR YIELD CONTRIBUTING AND MORPHOLOGICAL TRAITS IN UPLAND COTTON (GOSSYPIUM HIRSUTUM L.).

Authors :
Rahman, Samia A.
Iqbal, Muhammad Shahid
Riaz, Muhammad
Mahmood, Abid
Shahid, Muhammad Rafiq
Abbas, Ghazanfar
Farooq, Jehanzeb
Source :
Journal of Agricultural Research (03681157). 2013, Vol. 51 Issue 4, p393-398. 6p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

A study was carried out at Cotton Research Institute, AARI, Faisalabad Pakistan during the year 2013 to determine the cause and effect of some morphological traits viz. number of leaves per plant, number of sympodial branches per plant, number of bolls per plant and plant height on seed yield per plant in upland cotton. Seventy two cotton genotypes at F5 generation were sown in a RCBD with three replications. The results indicated that number of leaves (0.2334), sympodial branches (0.4859) and number of bolls per plant (0.3722) had exerted positive and significant to highly significant correlation at genotypic level with seed cotton yield per plant. The data also revealed that number of leaves showed positive and highly significant correlation with sympodial branches (0.3427"") plant height (0.6924"") and bolls per plant (0.4238""). Number of leaves, bolls per plant and sympodial branches showed positive direct effect on seed-cotton yield per plant. Direct effect of sympodial branches on cotton yield was very high and positive. However, number of leaves showed positive indirect effect via sympodial branches, bolls per plant and plant height. Similarly sympodial branches had shown positive indirect effect on seed yield per plant via number of leaves and bolls per plant. Direct effect of number of leaves on seed-cotton yield per plant was low while indirect effect via number of bolls per plant was positive. The number of bolls per plant also showed positive indirect effect via number of leaves, sympodial branches and plant height but effect of plant height on cotton yield was negative via number of bolls and sympodial branches. The results conclude that sympodial branches per plant influenced the cotton yield per plant to greater extent. Hence selection based on this trait may lead to development of genotypes having high seed cotton yield potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03681157
Volume :
51
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Agricultural Research (03681157)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
93428618