Cooperative breeding for the northern marginal areas |
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Authors: | Áslaug Helgadóttir Hólmgeir Björnsson |
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Affiliation: | (1) The Agricultural Research Institute, Keldnaholt, 112 Reykjavík, Iceland |
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Abstract: | Summary A joint breeding project for the northern areas of Scandinavia and Iceland was initiated in 1981 under the auspices of the Nordic Council of Ministers. Initially, efforts concentrated on cooperative trials in which both early and more advanced breeding material was tested at a number of experimental stations in the northern regions. This was followed by a joint breeding programme for timothy with the primary aim of developing varieties that possess broad adaptation to a range of Nordic climates and managements and can be grown throughout the northernmost part of Scandinavia. Each of the five national breeding stations originally provided 12 timothy genotypes for the project giving a total of 60 genotypes. The parental genotypes were compared as spaced plants at all five stations and their polycross progeny were grown under sward conditions at the same sites. On the basis of results obtained from these field trials parent clones have been selected and intercrossed to form synthetic populations. |
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Keywords: | Variety trials progeny testing timothy stability G × E interactions adaptation |
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