Genotypic values and selection gains were estimated in peanut lines derived from backcrossing with synthetic amphidiploid (A. batizocoi x A. duranensis)4x and a commercial cultivar, based on agronomical traits. Thirteen BC1F3 lines were grown in the field and submitted to 21 d of water suppression. Two earliness and drought tolerant cultivars (BR 1 and Senegal 55 437) were used as controls. Eight agronomic traits were adopted to characterize the lines. The estimates were based on mixed models (REML/BLUP) and Sum of Ranks Selection Index. We found that residual variance was greater than genotypic one, indicating the existence of variability within the families. Most traits showed high accuracy values. Three families showed an increased number of pods/plant, pod length and several seeds/pod. Negative gains were achieved for time for blooming and full pod maturation. As these traits are used as criteria for selection for earliness, these results favour the identification of short-cycle plants and prone to tolerate dry environments.
Runner peanuts are known for their high pod yields, but are late to flowering and pod maturation, and the optimal combination of these traits with pod yield is widely desired for peanut improvement. Selection indexes are useful tools for crop breeding. In this study, seven selection indexes combined with economic weights were used in a peanut population to estimate the superior and balanced genetic gains. Eleven runner genotypes were grown in three environments in the Northeast region of Brazil under a randomized block design with five replicates. The following indices were used: Smith and Hazel, Pesek and Baker, Williams, Elston, Subandi, Cruz, and Mulamba & Mock, in combination with the following economic weights: weight 1 for all evaluated traits, primary and secondary traits, genetic variation coefficient, genetic standard deviation, and b coefficient, obtained via multivariate regression. Although the population is genetically uniform, statistical differences were found, indicating sufficient genetic variability to generate selection progress. The combinations involving earliness traits were not satisfactory for production gains. The index based on the Mulamba & Mock rankings combined with weight 1 for all traits proved the optimal combination, as indicated by the most balanced gains. The cultivars Florunner, Cavalo, LGoPE-06, and LViPE-06 are promising germplasm for ensuring satisfactory selection gains based on production means and high heritability of the most evaluated traits.
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