SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.11 issue23Determination of the parabola of the retinal vasculature using a segmentation computational algorithmAnalysis of the allelic variability of BmVDAC and Subolesin, two vaccine candidates against Rhipicephalus microplus in isolates from Mexico author indexsubject indexsearch form
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO

Share


Nova scientia

On-line version ISSN 2007-0705

Abstract

ESPINOSA TAMAYO, Lino César et al. Environmental response of native maize populations of the southeast of Coahuila, Mexico. Nova scientia [online]. 2019, vol.11, n.23, 00006.  Epub Mar 10, 2020. ISSN 2007-0705.  https://doi.org/10.21640/ns.v11i23.1931.

Introduction:

The climate change consequences have been manifested on the environmental condition’s changes (temperature, rainfall, frost, drought, and soil salinity), then, the analysis of maize genetic diversity and their environment interaction is suggested. The objectives of this research were to determine the yield potential, the response to different environments of 63 maize landrace populations representative of the genetic variation in the southeast of Coahuila, Mexico.

Method:

The agronomic evaluation of native maize populations of eight racial groups was carried out in the spring-summer cycle in 2013 in two contrasted and representative locations of the environmental conditions in the southeast of Coahuila. Blocks were established independently within each location, and, in one location, blocks were different planting date. The blocks × location combinations were considered different environments to explore and make an interpretation of the genotype by environment interaction. In this paper, the response to the environment is analyzed based on grain yield and days to male flowering.

Results:

Eight populations were identified with an outstanding average yielding potential across environments, with values between 7.4 and 8.5 t ha-1, mainly representative from the Tuxpeño, Raton and Tuxpeño Norteño races. Populations adapted to transition-high altitude areas had an average yield reduction of 4.1 t ha-1 (55.0 %) after been exposed to intermediate altitude conditions.

Discussion or Conclusion:

The graphic interpretation of the genotype x environment interaction allowed to identify and to group the genotypes with specific adaptation in the environments of evaluation, as well as the ones with an average performance across environments. Twenty-two populations were identified with adaptation to transition- high altitude conditions, 14 to intermediate altitude areas and 27 populations with an average performance across environments.

Keywords : Zea mays L.; genetic diversity; genotype by environment interaction; germplasm evaluation.

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish