Skip to main content
AkademIndex

Products

For developers

AkademBasesoonOpen API for the ecosystem
Latin
English
Article

Winter Wheat Eastern European Regional Yield Trial: Identification of Superior Genotypes and Characterization of Environments

R. C. SharmaICARDA Tashkent UzbekistanAlexey MorgounovCIMMYT Apdo. Postal 6‐641 06600 Mexico D.F. MexicoBeyhan AkınCIMMYT Apdo. Postal 6‐641 06600 Mexico D.F. MexicoЛ. А. БеспаловаKrasnodar Agricultural Research Institute Krasnodar RussiaIain LangAgricultural Institute, Center for Agricultural Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Martovasar HungaryМ. А. ЛитвиненкоP. Mustățeaİrfan ÖztürkTrakya Agricultural Research Institute Edirne TurkeyA. PostolatiyS. RajaramHans‐Joachim BraunCIMMYT Apdo. Postal 6‐641 06600 Mexico D.F. Mexico
Crop Sciencejournal2014en
ABI

Abstract

ABSTRACT The International Winter Wheat Improvement Program (IWWIP)—a collaboration between the government of Turkey, the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), and the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA)—develops and globally distributes improved winter wheat ( Triticum aestivum L.) germplasm. The Winter Wheat Eastern European Regional Yield Trial was conducted by IWWIP during 1998–2005 using elite lines and varieties from IWWIP, Eastern Europe (EE), the United States, and Central and West Asia (CWA). This study analyzed data to identify superior genotypes and key locations that could be useful for future international collaboration on winter wheat. Grain yield and agronomic traits of 422 elite breeding lines and new varieties from 17 countries were evaluated across 39 locations. Superior genotypes and key environments for grain yield were determined using genotype and genotype × environment biplot analyses. Many superior genotypes were identified for both EE and CWA, and 11 genotypes showed high, stable grain yield across the regions. The most representative and discriminating sites for grain yield were Konya and Eskisehir, Turkey (overall); Edirne, Turkey (CWA); and Dobrich, Bulgaria (EE). These findings represent a comprehensive analysis of yield and stability of a large, globally important set of winter wheat genotypes and growing locations, which may be useful for national and international winter wheat improvement programs.

Topics

Identifiers

Citations and references

Metrics — AkademScholar · Coming soon