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<title>GENETIC VARIABILITY AND ASSOCIATION MAPPING FOR YIELD AND YIELD-RELATED TRAITS IN AFRICAN YAM BEAN [Sphenostylis stenocarpa (Hochst ex. A. Rich) Harms]</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1890</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 10:19:45 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T10:19:45Z</dc:date>
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<title>GENETIC VARIABILITY AND ASSOCIATION MAPPING FOR YIELD AND YIELD-RELATED TRAITS IN AFRICAN YAM BEAN [Sphenostylis stenocarpa (Hochst ex. A. Rich) Harms]</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1891</link>
<description>GENETIC VARIABILITY AND ASSOCIATION MAPPING FOR YIELD AND YIELD-RELATED TRAITS IN AFRICAN YAM BEAN [Sphenostylis stenocarpa (Hochst ex. A. Rich) Harms]
OLOMITUTU, Oluwaseyi Emmanuel
African Yam Bean (AYB) is an underutilised legume producing tubers and seeds&#13;
rich in dietary proteins and minerals, but its Seed Yield (SY) is low. Landraces of AYB&#13;
are repositories for potential beneficial alleles for the development of varieties with&#13;
enhanced yield and qualities. However, limited information is available on the extent of&#13;
genetic variation within available AYB landraces, the genetic basis of the variations and&#13;
relative importance of SY-related traits, which are required for the development of&#13;
varieties with improved SY and agronomic characteristics. Hence, genetic variability&#13;
among some AYB accessions for SY and association of genomic regions with the yieldrelated traits were assessed.&#13;
One hundred and ninety-six AYB accessions were evaluated for two years at&#13;
Ibadan, Kano and Ubiaja following standard practices. The experimental design was&#13;
14×14 lattice with three replicates. Data were collected on Days to Pod Maturity (DPM),&#13;
Pod Weight (PDW), Pod Length (PL), Seed Length (SL), Shelling Percentage (SP), 100-&#13;
Seed Weight (HSW), Seeds Per Pod (SPP) and Seed Thickness (ST), while SY was&#13;
estimated. Data were subjected to principal component analysis, cluster analysis,&#13;
correlation analysis, path coefficient analysis, descriptive statistics and ANOVA at α0.05.&#13;
Estimates of variance components, Genotypic Coefficient of Variation (GCV),&#13;
Phenotypic Coefficient of Variation (PCV) and broad-sense heritability were computed&#13;
for the traits. Yield stability index was used to identify superior and stable accessions.&#13;
The 196 accessions were genotyped using 5,416 DArTseq-based Single Nucleotide&#13;
Polymorphism (SNP) markers, from which 2,491 markers and 195 accessions were&#13;
retained after quality filtering. Marker-trait associations were determined using the mixed&#13;
linear model.&#13;
Accessions, environments and accession×environment interaction effects were&#13;
significant for all the traits. The DPM ranged from 118.5±14.3 (TSs-8, Ubiaja) to&#13;
220.0±6.0 (TSs-59, Kano), PW ranged from 4.2±0.3 g/plant (138A, Kano) to122.7±17.6&#13;
(TSs-421, Ibadan), while PL was shortest in accession TSs-22B (12.0±1.3 cm, Kano) and&#13;
longest in TSs-51 (27.3±0.6 cm, Ibadan). The SY ranged from 1.3±0.1 (TSs-326, Kano)&#13;
to 77.6±10.4 g/plant (TSs-421, Ibadan). Variances due to environment and&#13;
accession×environment interaction were higher than the genotypic variance for all the&#13;
traits. Also, estimates of PCV were higher than GCV for all traits. Broad-sense heritability&#13;
ranged from 17.1±3.5% (DPM) to 66.4±0.2% (SL). The first three principal components&#13;
accounted for 59.7% of the total variation among the accessions. Five major clusters were&#13;
delineated based on phenotypic characteristics. Shelling percentage (rg=0.76), 100-SW&#13;
(rg=0.29), DPM (rg=0.45), PW (rg=0.89), SPP (rg=0.20) and ST (rg=0.41) had significant&#13;
genetic correlations with SY, and exhibited positive direct effects on SY. Accessions TSs-&#13;
119, TSs-101, 138A, TSs-4, TSs-157A and TSs-61 were identified as superior and stable.&#13;
Across locations, 24 SNP markers were significantly associated with the traits at a&#13;
threshold of –log (p) =4, and explained 7.1 to 12.8% of the phenotypic variation among&#13;
the accessions.&#13;
A wide genetic variation exists among the African yam bean accessions. Selection&#13;
criteria for improved seed yield in African yam bean should include shelling percentage,&#13;
100-seed weight, days to pod maturity, pod weight, seeds per pod and seed thickness.
</description>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Jul 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-07-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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