Course Content
Qualitative and quantitative characters (qualitative and quantitative characters in crops and their inheritance)
0/2
Biometrical techniques in plant breeding (assessment of variability, aids to selection, choice of parents, crossing techniques, genotype-by- environment interactions)
0/3
Selection in self-pollinated crops (progeny test, pureline theory, origin of variation, genetic advance, genetic gain)
0/5
Hybridization techniques and its consequences (objectives, types, program, procedures, consequences)
0/4
Genetic composition of cross-pollinated populations (Hardy-Weinberg law, equilibrium, mating systems)
0/4
Breeding methods in self-pollinated crops (Mass, Pure line, Pedigree, Bulk, Backcross, etc)
0/5
Learn Introductory Plant Breeding with Rahul
About Lesson

Inbreeding depression

  • Inbreeding or consanguineous mating is mating between individuals related by descent or ancestry.
  • The degree of inbreeding of an individual is expressed as inbreeding coefficient (F).
  • When the individuals are closely related, e.g., in brother-sister mating or sib mating, the degree of inbreeding is high.
  • Inbreeding depression may be defined as the reduction or loss in vigour and fertility as a result of inbreeding.
  • Inbreeding depression = F1-F2 / F1 x 100

 

Effects of inbreeding

  1. Appearance of Lethal and Sublethal Alleles :
  • IB results in appearance of lethal; sublethal and sub vital characters.
  • Eg : Chlorophyll deficiencies, rootless seedlings, flower deformities – They do not survive, they lost in population.
  1. Reduction in vigor :
  • General reduction in vigor size of various plant parts.
  1. Reduction in Reproductive ability :
  • Reproductive ability of population decreases rapidly.
  • Many lines reproduce purely that they cannot be maintained.
  1. Separation of the population into distinct lines :
  • Population rapidly separates into distinct lines i.e. due to increase in homozygosity.
  • This leads to random fixation of alleles in different lines.
  • Therefore, lines differ in genotype and phenotype. It leads to increase in the variance of the population.
  1. Increase in homozygosity :
  • Each lines becomes homozygous.
  • Therefore, variation within a line decreases rapidly. After 7-8 generations of selfing the line becomes more than 99% homozygous. These are the inbreds. These have to be maintained by selfing.
  1. Reduction in yield :
  • IB leads to loss in yield.
  • The inbreds that survive and maintained have much less yield than the open pollinated variety from which they have been developed.