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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Yield–trait performance landscapes: from theory to application in breeding maize for drought tolerance

TLDR
The existence of rugged yield-performance landscapes with multiple peaks and intervening valleys of lower performance supports the proposition that phenotyping strategies, and the directions emphasized in genomic selection can be improved by creating knowledge of the topology of yield-trait performance landscapes.
Abstract
The effectiveness of breeding strategies to increase drought resistance in crops could be increased further if some of the complexities in gene-to-phenotype (G/P) relations associated with epistasis, pleiotropy, and genotype-byenvironment interactions could be captured in realistic G/P models, and represented in a quantitative manner useful for selection. This paper outlines a promising methodology. First, the concept of landscapes was extended from the study of fitness landscapes used in evolutionary genetics to the characterization of yield–trait-performance landscapes for agricultural environments and applications in plant breeding. Second, the E(NK) model of trait genetic architecture was extended to incorporate biophysical, physiological, and statistical components. Third, a graphical representation is proposed to visualize the yield–trait performance landscape concept for use in selection decisions. The methodology was demonstrated at a particular stage of a maize breeding programme with the objective of improving the drought tolerance of maize hybrids for the US Western Corn-Belt. The application of the framework to the genetic improvement of drought tolerance in maize supported selection of Doubled Haploid (DH) lines with improved levels of drought tolerance based on physiological genetic knowledge, prediction of testcross yield within the target population of environments, and their predicted potential to sustain further genetic progress with additional cycles of selection. The existence of rugged yield-performance landscapes with multiple peaks and intervening valleys of lower performance, as shown in this study, supports the proposition that phenotyping strategies, and the directions emphasized in genomic selection can be improved by creating knowledge of the topology of yield–trait performance landscapes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Greater sensitivity to drought accompanies maize yield increase in the U.S. Midwest

TL;DR: The results suggest that agronomic changes tend to translate improved drought tolerance of plants to higher average yields but not to decreasing drought sensitivity of yields at the field scale, which is a key question for climate change adaptation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Field-based phenomics for plant genetics research

TL;DR: This work defines key criteria, experimental approaches, equipment and data analysis tools required for robust, high-throughput field-based phenotyping (FBP), and focuses on simultaneous proximal sensing for spectral reflectance, canopy temperature, and plant architecture.
Journal ArticleDOI

In Posidonia oceanica cadmium induces changes in DNA methylation and chromatin patterning

TL;DR: The data demonstrate that Cd perturbs the DNA methylation status through the involvement of a specific methyltransferase, linked to nuclear chromatin reconfiguration likely to establish a new balance of expressed/repressed chromatin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phenotyping for drought tolerance of crops in the genomics era.

TL;DR: This review provides basic principles and a broad set of references useful for the management of phenotyping practices for the study and genetic dissection of drought tolerance and, ultimately, for the release of drought-tolerant cultivars.
References
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Book

The Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in Evolution

TL;DR: The structure of rugged fitness landscapes and the structure of adaptive landscapes underlying protein evolution, and the architecture of genetic regulatory circuits and its evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

An overview of APSIM, a model designed for farming systems simulation

TL;DR: The paper outlines APSIM's structure and provides details of the concepts behind the different plant, soil and management modules, including a diverse range of crops, pastures and trees, soil processes including water balance, N and P transformations, soil pH, erosion and a full range of management controls.
Book ChapterDOI

A critical evaluation of traits for improving crop yields in water-limited environments.

TL;DR: This chapter describes the components of yield and the determinants of survival against which the proposed and demonstrated contributions by traits are critically assessed and presents simulation models, which are very powerful tools for critically assessing the value of putative traits.
Book

Fitness Landscapes and the Origin of Species

TL;DR: This book builds for the first time a general, quantitative theory for the origin of species based on the notion of fitness landscapes introduced by Sewall Wright in 1932, generalizing this notion to explore the consequences of the huge dimensionality of Fitness landscapes that correspond to biological systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic Selection for Crop Improvement

TL;DR: Genomic selection would substantially accelerate the breeding cycle, enhancing gains per unit time and dramatically change the role of phenotyping, which would then serve to update prediction models and no longer to select lines.
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