Morphological and physiological traits associated with seed yield in different chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) genotypes under irrigated andwaterâ€deficit environments
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.38150/sajeb.1(6).p260-267Abstract
The morpho
â€physiological traits associated with seed yield in chickpea (Cicer
arietinum
L.) were evaluated on thirty five chickpea genotypes under two
different water regimes. In optimum condition, the highest correlation was
belonged to number of seeds/plant and number of pods/plant (0.944**) and
in water deficit condition, the strongest correlation of seed yield was observed
with number of seeds/plant (0.875**), number of pods/plant
(0.789**) and 100
â€seed weight (0.438**). Physiological traits (RWC, Chlorophyll
and Carotenoid) indicated low and positive correlation with yield, but
high positive correlation with other seeds yields related traits in optimum
condition while, under water deficit condition, chlorophyll content and RWC
had low and non
â€significant negative correlation with seeds yield. Carotenoid,
number of seeds/plant and 100
â€seed weight showed more direct positive
effect on yield in optimum environment and in stress condition, number
of seeds/ plant and 100
â€seed weight showed highest direct effect on seed
yield. Results of factor analysis showed that four factors explained 88.54%
and 34.5% of the total variance caused in the characters in optimum and
water deficit environment, respectively. In general, the results suggested
that a chickpea cultivar, for increased yield under non
â€stress conditions,
should have maximum number of seeds and pods per plant and under stress
conditions should have maximum number of seeds and pods per plant and
also keep the high level of RWC and chlorophyll content in their leaves. Thus,
identifying these traits as selection criteria in chickpea breeding program
may be useful for breeders to introduce suitable drought resistant chickpea
cultivars for arid regions.