African Journal of Crop Science

ISSN 2375-1231

African Journal of Crop Science ISSN: 2375-1231 Vol. 13 (4), pp. 001-006, April, 2025. Available online at www.internationalscholarsjournals.org © International Scholars Journals

Full Length Research Paper

Genetic Analysis of Yield Components in Durum Wheat: Gene Effects and Epistasis

Bnejdi Fethi and El Gazzah Mohamed

Laboratoire de Génétique et Biométrie, Département de Biologie, Faculté des Sciences de Tunis, Université Tunis, El Manar, Tunis 2092, Tunisia.

Accepted 2 January, 2025

Genetic control of the number of heads per plant, spikelets per spike and grains per spike was studied in two durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) crosses, Inrat 69/Cocorit71 and Karim/Ben Bechir, respectively. Separate analyses of gene effects were done using means of four generations (parents P1 and P2, F1, F 2, and the two reciprocal BC 1) at two sites. A three-parameter model was inadequate to explain all traits except number of heads per plant in Inrat 69/Cocorit 71 at one site. In most cases a digenic epistatic model explained variation in generation means. Dominance effects and dominance ´ dominance epistasis (l) were more important than additive effects and other epistatic components. Considering the genotype-by-environment interaction, the interactive model was applied and found adequate in all majority of cases except spiklets per spike and grains per spike in Inrat 69/Cocorit71. The results of this study indicate that maintenance of heterozygosity is useful for exploitation of epistatic effects and adaptability to varied environmental conditions for spiklets per spike and grain per spike in the cross Karim/Ben Bechir. Estimates of narrow-sense heritability indicated that the genetic effect was larger than the environmental effect. The additive effect was the largest component of genetic effects.

Key words: Genetic effects, epitasis, genotype-by-environment interaction, heritability, Triticum durum.