Family selection is widely used in early stages of selection in sugarcane breeding programs. Families are evaluated in the first one or two stages of selection and individual clones are selected from within superior families. These selected clones are evaluated for their performance in two or three selection stages before commercial release of superior clones. This study was undertaken to assess the relative performance of five sugarcane families for predicting potential parental combinations and also to identify rare and elite recombinants that can be exploited in future. Results from this study highlighted that two families viz., Co 7704 x Co 8209 and Co 85002 x Co 86011 contributed a greater proportion of elite clones combining acceptable levels of cane yield and sugar yield. The top ten clones selected based on sugar yield from the stage II evaluation holds greater promise in the subsequent regional selection programs. Overall, the findings suggest that selection of the best families based on their mean performance and further selection of individual clones based on their sugar yield in early stages would improve the efficiency of selection and increase heritability in the genetic populations being tested.
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