Course Content
Qualitative and quantitative characters (qualitative and quantitative characters in crops and their inheritance)
0/2
Biometrical techniques in plant breeding (assessment of variability, aids to selection, choice of parents, crossing techniques, genotype-by- environment interactions)
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Selection in self-pollinated crops (progeny test, pureline theory, origin of variation, genetic advance, genetic gain)
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Hybridization techniques and its consequences (objectives, types, program, procedures, consequences)
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Genetic composition of cross-pollinated populations (Hardy-Weinberg law, equilibrium, mating systems)
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Breeding methods in self-pollinated crops (Mass, Pure line, Pedigree, Bulk, Backcross, etc)
0/5
Learn Introductory Plant Breeding with Rahul
About Lesson

Factors affecting equilibrium frequencies

a) Migration:

  • Migration may introduce new alleles into the population or may change the frequencies of existing alleles.
  • The amount of change in gene frequency q will primarily depend upon two factors; first, the ratio of migrant individuals to those of the original population and second, the magnitude of difference between the values of q in the population and in the migrants.
  • In plant breeding programmes, migration is represented by intervarietal crosses, polycrosses, etc., wherein the breeder brings together into a single population two or more separate populations.

 

 

 

b) Mutation:

  • Mutation may produce a new allele not present in the population or may change the frequencies of existing alleles.
  • However, since the mutation rate is generally very low, i.e., approximately 10-6, the effects of mutation on gene frequency would be detectable only after a large number of generations.
  • Therefore, in breeding populations such effects may be ignored.

 

c) Random drift:

  • Random drift or genetic drift is a random change in gene frequency due to sampling error.
  • Random drift occurs in small populations because sampling error is greater in a smaller population than in a larger one.
  • Ultimately, the frequency of one of the alleles becomes zero and that of the other allele becomes one.
  • Breeding populations are generally small; hence a certain amount of genetic drift is bound to occur in them.
  • The breeder cannot do anything to prevent this genetic drift, except to use very large populations, which is often not practicable.
  • Alternatively, he may resort to phenotypic disassortative mating, which would again require time, labor and money.

 

d) Inbreeding:

  • Mating between individuals sharing a common parent in their ancestry is known as inbreeding.
  • Inbreeding reduces the proportion of heterozygotes or heterozygosity and increases the frequency of homozygotes or Homozygosity.
  • The rate of decrease in heterozygosity is equal to ½ N (N=number of plants in the population) per generation in monoecious or hermaphrodite species.
  • In dioecious species and in monoecious species where self-pollination is prevented, the decrease in heterozygosity is somewhat lower; it is equal to

 ½(N=1) per generation.

 

  • Thus, in small populations, even with strict random mating or even with strict cross-pollination the frequency of homozygotes increases, while that of heterozygotes decreases due to inbreeding.

 

e) Selection:

  • Differential reproduction rates of various genetopes is known as selection.
  • It allows the selected genotypes to reproduce, while the undesirable genotypes are eliminated.
  • Thus, the breeder is able to improve the various characteristics by selecting for the desirable types.
  • In a random mating population, if plants with AA or aa genotypes are selected, the frequency of A allele in the selected population would be 1 or 0, respectively.
  • Selection is expected to change gene frequencies rather than to eliminate one or the other allele.
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