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Life
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
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Abstract: |
Nitrogen is an essential element for maize growth, but excessive application can lead to
various environmental and ecological issues, including water pollution, air pollution, greenhouse
gas emissions, and biodiversity loss. Hence, developing maize hybrids resilient to low-N conditions
is vital for sustainable agriculture, particularly in nitrogen-deficient soils. Combining ability and
genetic relationships among parental lines is crucial for breeding superior hybrids under diverse
nitrogen levels. This study aimed to assess the genetic diversity of maize inbred lines using simple
sequence repeat (SSR) markers and evaluate their combining ability to identify superior hybrids
under low-N and recommended conditions. Local and exotic inbred lines were genotyped using
SSR markers, revealing substantial genetic variation with high gene diversity (He = 0.60), moderate
polymorphism information content (PIC = 0.54), and an average of 3.64 alleles per locus. Twenty-one
F1 hybrids were generated through a diallel mating design using these diverse lines. These hybrids
and a high yielding commercial check (SC-131) were field-tested under low-N and recommended
N conditions. Significant variations (p < 0.01) were observed among nitrogen levels, hybrids, and
their interaction for all recorded traits. Additive genetic variances predominated over non-additive
genetic variances for grain yield and most traits. Inbred IL3 emerged as an effective combiner for
developing early maturing genotypes with lower ear placement. Additionally, inbreds IL1, IL2, and
IL3 showed promise as superior combiners for enhancing grain yield and related traits under both
low-N and recommended conditions. Notably, hybrids IL1×IL4, IL2×IL5, IL2×IL6, and IL5×IL7
exhibited specific combining abilities for increasing grain yield and associated traits under low-N
stress conditions. Furthermore, strong positive associations were identified between grain yield
and specific traits like plant height, ear length, number of rows per ear, and number of kernels per
row. Due to their straightforward measurability, these relationships underscore the potential of
using these traits as proxies for indirect selection in early breeding generations, particularly under
low-N stress. This research contributes to breeding nitrogen-efficient maize hybrids and advances
our understanding of the genetic foundations for tolerance to nitrogen limitations
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