Genetic aspects of resistance to cocoa swollen-shoot virus in Ghana

The inheritance of resistance in cocoa to infection with cocoa swollen-shoot virus was studied in seed inoculation experiments with progenies of Upper Amazon, Trinitario and West African Amelonado parents. In an eight parent diallel cross grown in two seasons and in six male x female factorial experiments, general combining abilities were much more important than specific combining abilities. The diallel cross revealed significant maternal effects but there was little evidence of specific reciprocal differences. Estimates of general combining abilities corresponded with expectation and were positively correlated with maternal effects, the latter indicating that tester parents should be used as males. The results from scaling tests with hybrids between selections from the River Nanay (a Peruvian tributary of the River Amazon) and Amelonado fitted a model with additive resistance, there was no evidence of dominance. Attempts to obtain stronger sources of resistance by hybridisation and selection were unsuccessful. In three crosses the resistance of individual seedlings was compared with that of the parents using test crosses but no evidence of transgressive segregation was obtained. In further experiments seedlings of two hybrids between contrasting parents were heavily inoculated with virus so that few healthy survivors remained. Test crosses showed that these survivors and randomly selected seedlings of the same parentage did not differ as resistance sources.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: 87319 Lockwood, G.
Format: biblioteca
Published: 1981
Subjects:THEOBROMA CACAO, PROGENIE, COCOA SWOLLEN SHOOT VIRUS, VIROSIS, RESISTENCIA A LA ENFERMEDAD, CLONES DEL ALTO AMAZONAS, CLONES TRINITARIOS, CLONES AMELONADOS, PRUEBAS DE DESCENDENCIA, GHANA,
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