Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods

Four statistical approaches were examined for stability analysis for yield in order to determine their congruence in identification of musa genotypes. Thirty-six Musa genotypes grown in four location for two crop cycle were evaluated. The statistical methods used included Gauch’s additive main effect and multiplicative interaction (AMMI) model, Finlay and Wilkinson’s regression coefficient (FW), Francis and Kennenberg’s grouping based on CV and mean yield (FK), and Kang’s statistic for simultaneous selection (YSi) for high and stable yield. Changes in yield of genotypes across the locations were observed, suggesting that there was little homeostatic adaptation of the genotypes. There was a weak rank correlation among the locations and crop cycles, and also among stability methods. However, AMMI was significantly correlated with YSi. Also, FW was significantly correlated with FK. The level of convergence between any two methods ranged from 16 to 44%, while among any three or the four method was between 16 and 18%. Three cooking banana landraces, Bluggoe, Fougamou and pelipita were identified as high yielding and stable by all methods. In most cases, genotypes selected by AMMI and FW were also classified as stable by the other two methods. We conclude that simultaneous use of different stability statistics may protect breeders from wrongly identifying presumably stable genotypes.

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Main Authors: Baiyeri, K., Tenkouano, A., Mbah, B.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:musa genotypes, crop cycle, bananas, breeders, antagonistic, stability analysis,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92593
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-925932023-02-15T06:45:18Z Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods Baiyeri, K. Tenkouano, A. Mbah, B. musa genotypes crop cycle bananas breeders antagonistic stability analysis Four statistical approaches were examined for stability analysis for yield in order to determine their congruence in identification of musa genotypes. Thirty-six Musa genotypes grown in four location for two crop cycle were evaluated. The statistical methods used included Gauch’s additive main effect and multiplicative interaction (AMMI) model, Finlay and Wilkinson’s regression coefficient (FW), Francis and Kennenberg’s grouping based on CV and mean yield (FK), and Kang’s statistic for simultaneous selection (YSi) for high and stable yield. Changes in yield of genotypes across the locations were observed, suggesting that there was little homeostatic adaptation of the genotypes. There was a weak rank correlation among the locations and crop cycles, and also among stability methods. However, AMMI was significantly correlated with YSi. Also, FW was significantly correlated with FK. The level of convergence between any two methods ranged from 16 to 44%, while among any three or the four method was between 16 and 18%. Three cooking banana landraces, Bluggoe, Fougamou and pelipita were identified as high yielding and stable by all methods. In most cases, genotypes selected by AMMI and FW were also classified as stable by the other two methods. We conclude that simultaneous use of different stability statistics may protect breeders from wrongly identifying presumably stable genotypes. 1999 2018-05-17T09:02:47Z 2018-05-17T09:02:47Z Journal Article Baiyeri, K., Tenkouano, A. & Mbah, B. (1999). Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods. Journal of Tropical Forestry Resources, 15(2), 53-67. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92593 en Limited Access
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic musa genotypes
crop cycle
bananas
breeders
antagonistic
stability analysis
musa genotypes
crop cycle
bananas
breeders
antagonistic
stability analysis
spellingShingle musa genotypes
crop cycle
bananas
breeders
antagonistic
stability analysis
musa genotypes
crop cycle
bananas
breeders
antagonistic
stability analysis
Baiyeri, K.
Tenkouano, A.
Mbah, B.
Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods
description Four statistical approaches were examined for stability analysis for yield in order to determine their congruence in identification of musa genotypes. Thirty-six Musa genotypes grown in four location for two crop cycle were evaluated. The statistical methods used included Gauch’s additive main effect and multiplicative interaction (AMMI) model, Finlay and Wilkinson’s regression coefficient (FW), Francis and Kennenberg’s grouping based on CV and mean yield (FK), and Kang’s statistic for simultaneous selection (YSi) for high and stable yield. Changes in yield of genotypes across the locations were observed, suggesting that there was little homeostatic adaptation of the genotypes. There was a weak rank correlation among the locations and crop cycles, and also among stability methods. However, AMMI was significantly correlated with YSi. Also, FW was significantly correlated with FK. The level of convergence between any two methods ranged from 16 to 44%, while among any three or the four method was between 16 and 18%. Three cooking banana landraces, Bluggoe, Fougamou and pelipita were identified as high yielding and stable by all methods. In most cases, genotypes selected by AMMI and FW were also classified as stable by the other two methods. We conclude that simultaneous use of different stability statistics may protect breeders from wrongly identifying presumably stable genotypes.
format Journal Article
topic_facet musa genotypes
crop cycle
bananas
breeders
antagonistic
stability analysis
author Baiyeri, K.
Tenkouano, A.
Mbah, B.
author_facet Baiyeri, K.
Tenkouano, A.
Mbah, B.
author_sort Baiyeri, K.
title Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods
title_short Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods
title_full Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods
title_fullStr Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods
title_full_unstemmed Comparing yield stability of Musa genotypes in Nigeria using four statistical methods
title_sort comparing yield stability of musa genotypes in nigeria using four statistical methods
publishDate 1999
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92593
work_keys_str_mv AT baiyerik comparingyieldstabilityofmusagenotypesinnigeriausingfourstatisticalmethods
AT tenkouanoa comparingyieldstabilityofmusagenotypesinnigeriausingfourstatisticalmethods
AT mbahb comparingyieldstabilityofmusagenotypesinnigeriausingfourstatisticalmethods
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