Abstract

Plant breeding is a decision-making discipline based on understanding project objectives. Genetic improvement projects can have two competing objectives: maximize the rate of genetic improvement and minimize the loss of useful genetic variance. For commercial plant breeders, competition in the marketplace forces greater emphasis on maximizing immediate genetic improvements. In contrast, public plant breeders have an opportunity, perhaps an obligation, to place greater emphasis on minimizing the loss of useful genetic variance while realizing genetic improvements. Considerable research indicates that short-term genetic gains from genomic selection are much greater than phenotypic selection, while phenotypic selection provides better long-term genetic gains because it retains useful genetic diversity during the early cycles of selection. With limited resources, must a soybean breeder choose between the two extreme responses provided by genomic selection or phenotypic selection? Or is it possible to develop novel breeding strategies that will provide a desirable compromise between the competing objectives? To address these questions, we decomposed breeding strategies into decisions about selection methods, mating designs, and whether the breeding population should be organized as family islands. For breeding populations organized into islands, decisions about possible migration rules among family islands were included. From among 60 possible strategies, genetic improvement is maximized for the first five to 10 cycles using genomic selection and a hub network mating design, where the hub parents with the largest selection metric make large parental contributions. It also requires that the breeding populations be organized as fully connected family islands, where every island is connected to every other island, and migration rules allow the exchange of two lines among islands every other cycle of selection. If the objectives are to maximize both short-term and long-term gains, then the best compromise strategy is similar except that the mating design could be hub network, chain rule, or a multi-objective optimization method-based mating design. Weighted genomic selection applied to centralized populations also resulted in the realization of the greatest proportion of the genetic potential of the founders but required more cycles than the best compromise strategy.

Highlights

  • Responses to the selection of commodity crops have been enabled by decreasing the number of years per cycle of recurrent selection, by increasing the number of replicable genotypes, and by increasing the number of replicated field trials

  • Initial sets of soybean lines were generated by simulating crosses of 20 contemporary homozygous lines representing the diversity of soybean germplasm adapted to Maturity Group (MG) II and III with IA3023, a former widely grown variety adapted to MG III, to generate in silico F1 progeny (Ramasubramanian and Beavis, 2020)

  • Rc - Average genotypic value in cycle ‘c’ – R0 Rm - Maximum possible genotypic value (200) Since we previously evaluated the genetic improvement of soybean using phenotypic selection (PS) and the Hub Network (HN) mating design in centralized populations, we used PS with a selection intensity of 1.75 for the centralized population and HN mating design as a reference for comparing novel combinations of selection and mating designs proposed in the study

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Summary

Introduction

Responses to the selection of commodity crops have been enabled by decreasing the number of years per cycle of recurrent selection, by increasing the number of replicable genotypes (selection intensity), and by increasing the number of replicated field trials (heritability on an entry mean basis). While the initial interest in GS has been to increase genetic gains, plant breeders are aware that increased selection intensities are associated with faster losses of genetic potential in the founder populations (Robertson, 1960; Hill and Robertson, 2008; Bulmer, 1971). The other curve depicts a response with slower rates than the previous one in early cycles, but with greater genotypic values before approaching a limit due to loss of genetic potential from selection. This response pattern is desirable for maximizing gains while preserving genetic variability. In contrast public plant breeders have an opportunity, perhaps an obligation, to place greater emphasis

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