Abstract

Diverse crops are both outbred and clonally propagated. Breeders typically use truncation selection of parents and invest significant time, land, and money evaluating the progeny of crosses to find exceptional genotypes. We developed and tested genomic mate selection criteria suitable for organisms of arbitrary homozygosity level where the full-sibling progeny are of direct interest as future parents and/or cultivars. We extended cross variance and covariance variance prediction to include dominance effects and predicted the multivariate selection index genetic variance of crosses based on haplotypes of proposed parents, marker effects, and recombination frequencies. We combined the predicted mean and variance into usefulness criteria for parent and variety development. We present an empirical study of cassava (Manihot esculenta), a staple tropical root crop. We assessed the potential to predict the multivariate genetic distribution (means, variances, and trait covariances) of 462 cassava families in terms of additive and total value using cross-validation. Most variance (89%) and covariance (70%) prediction accuracy estimates were greater than zero. The usefulness of crosses was accurately predicted with good correspondence between the predicted and the actual mean performance of family members breeders selected for advancement as new parents and candidate varieties. We also used a directional dominance model to quantify significant inbreeding depression for most traits. We predicted 47,083 possible crosses of 306 parents and contrasted them to those previously tested to show how mate selection can reveal the new potential within the germplasm. We enable breeders to consider the potential of crosses to produce future parents (progeny with top breeding values) and varieties (progeny with top own performance).

Highlights

  • Diverse crops ranging from staples to cash crops to forestry products are both outbred and clonally propagated (Gemenet and Khan 2017)

  • We extended cross variance and covariance variance prediction to include dominance effects and predicted the multivariate selection index genetic variance of crosses based on haplotypes of proposed parents, marker effects, and recombination frequencies

  • We found that genome-wide estimates of the effect of homozygosity were consistently negative for logFYLD with a mean directional dominance regression coefficient of À2.75 log(tons/ ha) across genetic groups

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Summary

Introduction

Diverse crops ranging from staples (e.g., cassava and potato) to cash crops (e.g., cacao) to forestry products (e.g., eucalyptus) are both outbred and clonally propagated (Gemenet and Khan 2017). In these crops, exceptional genotypes can be immortalized and commercialized as clonal varieties. The breeding scheme can be further divided into two parts (Gaynor et al 2017; Santantonio and Robbins, 2020; Werner et al 2020) consisting of (1) population improvement by recurrent selection (RS) and (2) a variety development pipeline (VDP). Germplasm is advanced from one VDP stage to the by vegetative propagation

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