2020
DOI: 10.20546/ijcmas.2020.910.152
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Correlation Studies and Path Coefficient Analysis in Chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…plant showed a significant positive association with plant height, the number of pods per plant, the number of seeds per plant and the number of branches per plant in both the environments, whereas in environment I it showed a significantly and negative association with harvest index. Similar findings were also earlier reported by Dawane et al (2020), Jan et al (2021) and Xalxo et al (2021).…”
Section: Ravi Singh Thapa 1 Et Alsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…plant showed a significant positive association with plant height, the number of pods per plant, the number of seeds per plant and the number of branches per plant in both the environments, whereas in environment I it showed a significantly and negative association with harvest index. Similar findings were also earlier reported by Dawane et al (2020), Jan et al (2021) and Xalxo et al (2021).…”
Section: Ravi Singh Thapa 1 Et Alsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Association analysis by the correlation coefficient provides a way to assess the parameters that influence the dependent variable, such as crop yield. It also aids in the design of a selection process and concurrent improvement criteria of economic yield and other important characteristics (Akansha et al,2017;Dawane et al, 2020). In present study, days to 50% flowering showed a highly significant and negative correlation with pods per plant (-0.344), and a nonsignificant correlation (-0.085) was recorded with seed yield per plant in chickpea.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 48%
“…Every trait in the study recorded very high heritability (Fig- 1 [20] in 18 genotypes of chickpea for SY, HI, Gulwane et al, [21] in 44 chickpea genotypes and Karthikeyan et al, [22] in 20 genotypes for TW, Kishore et al, [23] in 240 chickpea lines & Pravallika et al, [24] in 23 genotypes for NSP, Kumar et al, [25] for BY in 50 chickpea genotypes, Tare et al, [26] for NUFP in 28 chickpea germplasm. These results suggest that these traits could be considered as tools for crop improvement involving selection, which could be possibly due to additive gene action, meaning that they can be improved by adapting selection excluding progeny testing.…”
Section: Heritability and Genetic Advance As % To Meanmentioning
confidence: 99%