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- Author or Editor: Anita N. Miller x
- Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science x
Abstract
A 6-parent diallel was used to study combining ability and type of gene action contributing to resistance in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) to anthracnose caused by Colletotrichum dematium (Pers. ex Fr.). The 6 parents, one set of F1, hybrids, and 5 selected reciprocal crosses were grown at 2 locations. Ripe fruit were harvested, puncture-inoculated with the pathogen, and subsequently evaluated for resultant lesion diameter. No reciprocal effects were found at either location for the 5 crosses studied. The analysis of variance for parent and F1 hybrid performance revealed a genotype × location interaction. Combining ability analysis based on the F1 hybrids alone indicated a significant general combining ability (GCA) effect. The specific combining ability (SCA) and GCA × location interaction mean squares were smaller than the GCA value but were still significant. Differential performance over locations of the hybrids of one line was primarily responsible for the GCA × location interaction. Analysis of variance and covariance of parental arrays indicated partial dominance in the direction of susceptibility. Narrow sense heritability for the trait was 70% over both locations.
Abstract
‘Redskin’ peach (Prunus persica Batsch.) trees, planted at a high-density spacing (3 × 5 m), were fertilized annually with urea at rates of 45, 90, or 135 kg·ha−1. Trees were trained to a trapezoidal hedge by annual, mechanized, summer pruning. Within each fertilizer plot, subplots of five summer-pruning treatments were applied. Single pruning treatments were made at 120 days after full bloom (DAFB) and 150 DAFB. Paired pruning treatments were applied 30 + 60 DAFB, 60 + 120 DAFB, and 60 + 150 DAFB. Pruning at 120 DAFB alone, and in combination with pruning at 60 DAFB, decreased trunk cross-sectional area (TCA), fruit soluble solids content, and weight, while increasing the percentage of surface that was red. Pruning at 30 DAFB followed by a second pruning at 60 DAFB decreased leaf Ca concentration in comparison to pruning treatments applied later in the season. Increasing N fertilization also decreased leaf Ca. Year, N level, and pruning treatments gave a statistical interaction on mean fruit weight and yield.