Genetic parameters of growth and stem forking for black spruce progeny tested in New Brunswick, Canada
Autor: | Marek J. Krasowski, M. S. Fullarton, J. J. Wang, G. H. Yan, Yuhui Weng |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
040101 forestry
0106 biological sciences Diameter at breast height Order (ring theory) Forestry 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences Heritability 01 natural sciences Genetic correlation Black spruce Tree (descriptive set theory) Animal science 0401 agriculture forestry and fisheries Tree breeding Genetic selection 010606 plant biology & botany Mathematics |
Zdroj: | New Forests. 49:265-277 |
ISSN: | 1573-5095 0169-4286 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11056-017-9618-0 |
Popis: | We investigated genetic parameters for juvenile to mature growth and stem forking in black spruce [Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.] in order to obtain reliable estimates for supporting eastern Canadian tree breeding strategies. The study was based on data collected from two series of progeny tests of black spruce in New Brunswick (NB) including 285 open-pollinated families and more than 57,000 individual trees. Height (HT), diameter at breast height (DBH), and stem forking (SF) were periodically measured between ages 5 and 35 years. Results showed that tree volume (V), HT and DBH were highly genetically controlled, with average individual narrow-sense heritability ( $$h_{i}^{2}$$ ) estimates of 0.29, 0.29 and 0.21, and family mean heritability ( $$h_{F}^{2}$$ ) estimates of 0.82, 0.85 and 0.77, respectively. SF had low $$h_{i}^{2}$$ (= 0.06 on average) but had moderate $$h_{F}^{2}$$ (= 0.56), indicating family selection might effectively reduce SF. Both $$h_{i}^{2}$$ and $$h_{F}^{2}$$ increased with age and then stabilized or declined, being the highest around ages 15–20 years for all traits. The type-B genetic correlation ( $$r_{B}$$ ) estimates were moderate to high for all the traits, suggesting negligible genotype × environment interactions. Strong age–age genetic correlation estimates were found for growth traits, implying the potential for practicing early selection. Age–age genetic correlation estimates were moderate for SF (= 0.72). Trait–trait genetic correlation estimates were strong and positive among growth traits, but between growth traits and SF they were mostly negligible albeit positive. Overall, results suggest that genetic selection will be effective for growth traits but much less so for reducing stem forking in New Brunswick’s black spruce. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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