Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)

The naturally coloured cotton is the age old crop holding evidence in ancient civilization. Over the course of time, the machine spinnable superior white linted varieties replaced the cultivation of coloured cotton which having poor yield and fibre quality. In the present era, concerns about polluti...

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Main Author: R. Nivedha, S. Rajeswari, N. Premalatha and N. Sritharan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indian Society of Plant Breeders 2020-06-01
Series:Electronic Journal of Plant Breeding
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-6c143c28b5d54ce59088030a647468742021-01-07T07:40:39ZengIndian Society of Plant BreedersElectronic Journal of Plant Breeding0975-928X2020-06-0111255055510.37992/2020.1102.092Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)R. Nivedha, S. Rajeswari, N. Premalatha and N. SritharanThe naturally coloured cotton is the age old crop holding evidence in ancient civilization. Over the course of time, the machine spinnable superior white linted varieties replaced the cultivation of coloured cotton which having poor yield and fibre quality. In the present era, concerns about pollution and toxicity caused by synthetic dyes and dyeing industries have resurrected the interest of naturally coloured cotton. In view of eco-friendly processing, improving the fibre characteristics of naturally coloured cotton is the need of the hour. The study of genetics behind the colour development serve in developing coloured linted varieties with enhanced fibre quality by crossing with superior white linted lines. The present study involved studying F2 populations of direct and reciprocal crosses between two naturally coloured (Parbani American and Red 5-7) and one white fibred (MCU 5) upland cotton. The F1 was intermediate to parents in fibre colour. The phenotypic ratio in F2 was observed to be 1:2:1 proving the inheritance to be governed by single incompletely dominant gene. But a lot of variation for colour intensity in F2 could be related to more than one loci or the presence of modifiers. This could be further examined at molecular level in future. naturally coloured cottoninheritancebrown fibre
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. Nivedha, S. Rajeswari, N. Premalatha and N. Sritharan
spellingShingle R. Nivedha, S. Rajeswari, N. Premalatha and N. Sritharan
Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
Electronic Journal of Plant Breeding
naturally coloured cotton
inheritance
brown fibre
author_facet R. Nivedha, S. Rajeswari, N. Premalatha and N. Sritharan
author_sort R. Nivedha, S. Rajeswari, N. Premalatha and N. Sritharan
title Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
title_short Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
title_full Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
title_fullStr Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
title_full_unstemmed Inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)
title_sort inheritance study for lint colour in naturally brown coloured upland cotton (gossypium hirsutum l.)
publisher Indian Society of Plant Breeders
series Electronic Journal of Plant Breeding
issn 0975-928X
publishDate 2020-06-01
description The naturally coloured cotton is the age old crop holding evidence in ancient civilization. Over the course of time, the machine spinnable superior white linted varieties replaced the cultivation of coloured cotton which having poor yield and fibre quality. In the present era, concerns about pollution and toxicity caused by synthetic dyes and dyeing industries have resurrected the interest of naturally coloured cotton. In view of eco-friendly processing, improving the fibre characteristics of naturally coloured cotton is the need of the hour. The study of genetics behind the colour development serve in developing coloured linted varieties with enhanced fibre quality by crossing with superior white linted lines. The present study involved studying F2 populations of direct and reciprocal crosses between two naturally coloured (Parbani American and Red 5-7) and one white fibred (MCU 5) upland cotton. The F1 was intermediate to parents in fibre colour. The phenotypic ratio in F2 was observed to be 1:2:1 proving the inheritance to be governed by single incompletely dominant gene. But a lot of variation for colour intensity in F2 could be related to more than one loci or the presence of modifiers. This could be further examined at molecular level in future.
topic naturally coloured cotton
inheritance
brown fibre
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