Seed Set Patterns in East African Highland Cooking Bananas Show Asymmetric Distribution in Bunches and Fruits

dc.contributor.author Waniale, Allan
dc.contributor.author Swennen, Rony
dc.contributor.author Mukasa, Settumba B.
dc.contributor.author Tugume, Arthur K.
dc.contributor.author Kubiriba, Jerome
dc.contributor.author Tushemereirwe, Wilberforce K.
dc.contributor.author Batte, Michael
dc.contributor.author Brown, Allan
dc.contributor.author Tumuhimbise, Robooni
dc.date.accessioned 2023-11-17T07:54:03Z
dc.date.available 2023-11-17T07:54:03Z
dc.date.issued 2021-04-14
dc.description Research article en_US
dc.description.abstract Low female fertility in bananas is the biggest hurdle for banana breeding. The aim of this study was to determine seed set patterns in East African Highland Cooking bananas (EAHBs) to inform future decisions on a more targeted approach of increasing seed set and subsequently banana-breeding efficiency. Matooke (AAA) and Mchare (AA) bananas are genetically distinct but belong to the same genetic complex, referred to as EAHBs. Seed set patterns in “Enzirabahima” (AAA), “Mshale” (AA), and “Nshonowa” (AA), all with residual fertility, were examined after hand pollination with a highly male fertile wild banana “Calcutta 4” (AA). Seed set in “Enzirabahima” is predominant in distal hands. Mchare cultivars have a slightly more even distribution of seeds in their hands compared to “Enzirabahima”. There is a gradual increase in seed set from proximal to distal hands with a slight drop in the last hand. This pattern is more definite in “Enzirabahima” and “Mshale”, while “Nshonowa” has a somewhat inconsistent pattern. There is also a drop in seed set per 100 fruits per hand from small to larger bunches. However, larger bunches have a higher pollination success compared to smaller bunches. They therefore set more seed on 100 fruits per hand and per bunch basis, if bunches without seed are accounted for. Pollination success rate increases from smaller to larger bunches of EAHBs. Seed set is biased toward the distal third part of fruits of examined EAHBs, as well as tetraploid Matooke hybrid “401K-1” (AAAA), and improved diploid “Zebrina” GF (AA) that were used for comparison. In comparison, in the highly female fertile “Calcutta 4”, seed set is along the entire length of the fruit. Seed set bias in the distal hands and distal end of fruits suggests a systematic mechanism rather than a random occurrence. It is expected that this information will provide a foundation for increased crossbreeding efficiency in bananas. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Breeding Better Banana project under the CGIAR Research Program for Roots, Tubers and Bananas. en_US
dc.identifier.citation Waniale, A.; Swennen, R.; Mukasa, S.B.; Tugume, A.K.; Kubiriba, J.; Tushemereirwe,W.K.; Batte, M.; Brown, A.; Tumuhimbise, R. Seed Set Patterns in East African Highland Cooking Bananas Show Asymmetric Distribution in Bunches and Fruits. Agronomy 2021, 11, 763. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11040763 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10570/12477
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Agronomy en_US
dc.subject Female fertility en_US
dc.subject Banana breeding en_US
dc.subject Matooke and Mchare pollination en_US
dc.subject Bunch size en_US
dc.subject Pollination success en_US
dc.title Seed Set Patterns in East African Highland Cooking Bananas Show Asymmetric Distribution in Bunches and Fruits en_US
dc.type Article en_US
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