Mass selection for lint percentage in a colored cotton cultivar

Authors

  • Luiz Paulo de Carvalho
  • Paulo Augusto Vianna Barroso
  • José Aderaldo Trajano dos Santos
  • Hamilton Santos Alves

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2005.v40.7042

Keywords:

cotton, breeding, green fiber, genetic variability

Abstract

The colored fiber cotton presents inferior quality in relation to the white one due to the fact that the colored was poorly studied as far as genetic breeding is concerned. The objective of this work was to verify the effect of mass selection for high, medium and low lint percentage in a population of the cotton cultivar BRS Verde. Five hundred plants were randomly harvested and after ginning, they were separated into four groups, based on lint percentage. Seeds within each class were mixed up to compose the treatments of a trial, ran as a complete randomized block design with four replicates. Treatments comprised four classes plus a sample of original population. Mass selection was efficient in changing the populations means and the overall genetic gain, concerning high lint percentage, was 11%.

 

Published

2005-09-01

How to Cite

de Carvalho, L. P., Barroso, P. A. V., dos Santos, J. A. T., & Alves, H. S. (2005). Mass selection for lint percentage in a colored cotton cultivar. Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira, 40(9), 895–898. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2005.v40.7042

Issue

Section

GENETICS