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Forest Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2008

Maize

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Forest Sciences

Identification Of Advantages Of Maize-Legume Intercropping Over Solitary Cropping Through Competition Indices In The East Mediterranean Region, Şaban Yilmaz, Mehmet Atak, Mustafa Erayman Jan 2008

Identification Of Advantages Of Maize-Legume Intercropping Over Solitary Cropping Through Competition Indices In The East Mediterranean Region, Şaban Yilmaz, Mehmet Atak, Mustafa Erayman

Turkish Journal of Agriculture and Forestry

Alternate planting combinations of maize (Zea mays L.) with common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) or cowpea (Vigna sinensis L.) were compared with the solitary planting of each crop during 2003 and 2004 under the East Mediterranean conditions in Turkey. The experiment comprised 15 treatments; sole planting of maize (71,500 plant ha^{-1}), sole planting of common bean (285,750 plant ha^{-1}) and cowpea (285,750 plant ha^{-1}), and 2 different planting patterns (1- and 2-row plantings) with 6 maize-legumes intercropping series, 50:50, 67:50, and 100:50, respectively, using randomized complete block design with 3 replications. Evaluation of the planting patterns was performed on basis …


Genetic Analysis Of Grain Yield And Starch Content In Nine Maize Populations, Zvonimir Zdunic, Anto Mijic, Krunoslav Dugalic, Domagoj Simic, Josip Brkic, Ana Marjanovic Jeromela Jan 2008

Genetic Analysis Of Grain Yield And Starch Content In Nine Maize Populations, Zvonimir Zdunic, Anto Mijic, Krunoslav Dugalic, Domagoj Simic, Josip Brkic, Ana Marjanovic Jeromela

Turkish Journal of Agriculture and Forestry

The objective of this study was to estimate main genetic effects including digenic non-allelic epistasis for yield and starch content in grain by generation mean analysis performed in 9 maize populations (biparental crosses) and their subsequent 6 generations (2 parental, F1 and F2, and 2 backcrosses). The estimated additive-dominance model of inheritance was, due to epistasis, only partially successful in explaining inheritance model for investigated traits and crosses. The additive-dominance model was adequate at 6 crosses for grain yield and 3 crosses for starch content. A digenic epistatic model was sufficient to explain the inheritance model at 6 crosses for …