Abstract

Key messageHeterosis effects for dough quality and baking volume were close to zero. However, hybrids have a higher grain yield at a given level of bread making quality compared to their parental lines.Bread wheat cultivars have been selected according to numerous quality traits to fulfill the requirements of the bread making industry. These include beside protein content and quality also rheological traits and baking volume. We evaluated 35 male and 73 female lines and 119 of their single-cross hybrids at three different locations for grain yield, protein content, sedimentation value, extensograph traits and baking volume. No significant differences (p < 0.05) were found in the mean comparisons of males, females and hybrids, except for higher grain yield and lower protein content in the hybrids. Mid-parent and better-parent heterosis values were close to zero and slightly negative, respectively, for baking volume and extensograph traits. However, the majority of heterosis values resulted in the finding that hybrids had higher grain yield than lines for a given level of baking volume, sedimentation value or energy value of extensograph. Due to the high correlation with the mid-parent values (r > 0.70), an initial prediction of hybrid performance based on line per se performance for protein content, sedimentation value, most traits of the extensograph and baking volume is possible. The low variance due to specific combining ability effects for most quality traits points toward an additive gene action requires quality selection within both heterotic groups. Consequently, hybrid wheat can combine high grain yield with high bread making quality. However, the future use of wheat hybrids strongly depends on the establishment of a cost-efficient and reliable seed production system.

Highlights

  • Bread wheat varieties (Triticum aestivum spp. aestivum) have to fulfill numerous requirements along the supply chain (Thorwarth et al 2018)

  • Due to capacity limits in the baking quality analytics, the presented data were based on a selected fraction of the initial plant material of 35 male and 73 female lines and 119 of their single-cross hybrids depending on different criteria such as varying line per se and hybrid performance for agronomic traits, protein content and sedimentation value or diversity in glutenin bands

  • This selection led to a representative subsample of the initial 1744 hybrids as reflected by a PCA (Principal Component Analysis) based on the best linear unbiased estimators (BLUEs) (Best Linear Unbiased Estimates) for grain yield, protein content and sedimentation value

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Summary

Introduction

Bread wheat varieties (Triticum aestivum spp. aestivum) have to fulfill numerous requirements along the supply chain (Thorwarth et al 2018). Besides high grain yield and disease resistance, which are important for farmers, bread making quality is of great relevance (Oury and Godin 2007). Theoretical and Applied Genetics other quality aspects such as storage potential and freshness are relevant for the product quality (Freund and Kim 2006). High water absorption promotes a good baking volume, good freshness of the end product and improved storage potential (Puhr and D’Appolonia 1992; Koppel and Ingver 2010). It is of practical interest because with a high water absorption, less flour is required to reach a certain loaf volume (Koppel and Ingver 2010; Frakolaki et al 2018)

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