Summary
Genetic parameters for describing the induced continuous variation of self-fertilising plants have been defined in terms of mutation rate per allele and the additive and dominance effects of the genes concerned. Estimation and interpretation of these parameters are discussed.
It is shown that no single generation up to the M3 provides enough statistics to estimate the parameters, unless mutagenic treatment is applied to zygotic cells. As in the case of generations derived from hybridisation between two inbred lines, information on the average degree of dominance and gene association in parental lines can be obtained using these estimates. The mutation rate can be estimated when two parental lines with significantly different phenotypic values are investigated simultaneously.
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Acknowledgements
Acknowledgments.-The author is greatly indebted to Professor J. L. Jinks for his valuable discussion and suggestions. He also thanks Drs M. J. Kearsey and H. S. Pooni for their critical reading of the manuscript. This work was carried out while the author was staying at the Department of Genetics of the University of Birmingham under the sponsorship of the British Council.
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Yonezawa, K. Some additional considerations on the method of genetical analysis for induced continuous variation of self-fertilising plants. Heredity 43, 191–204 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.1979.74
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.1979.74