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Öğe Heritability of yield and its components in lentil (Lens culinaris medik.)(2010) Bicer B.T.; Sakar D.Ten lentil (Lens culinaris Medik.) genotypes were grown at Southeast Anatolia region of Turkey. The broadsense heritability was estimated for plant height, number of stems and pods per plant, seed yield, biological yield, 100-seed weight, days to flowering and maturity. The heritability for days to flowering and maturity, 1000 seed weight and number of seeds plant-1 were estimated as 71%, 80%, 98% and 70%, respectively. The heritability of plant height was quite small (16%); indicating that this trait is depend heavily on the variation available in the source material and of the effects of climate and weather.Öğe Inheritance of days to flowering and seed weight in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) and efficiency of selection from early generation(2004) Sakar D.; Bicer B.T.This research was conducted to determine the genetic effects for days to flowering and seed weight in six populations (P1, P2, F1, F2, B1 and B2) obtained from crossing of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) cultivars FLIP 83-47C and ILC 482. Additive genetic effect was important for days to flowering and therefore genetic advance was thought to be possible from selection in the F2 for this character. Both the additive and dominant x dominant gene effects were important for seed weight and this indicated that selection for seed weight should better be delayed to later generations. From F2 four groups of plants (early flowering, large seeded, early flowering and large seeded and randomly selected plants) with 20% intensity were selected and advanced to F Mean days to flower of plants selected for earliness was 1.8 days earlier than the mean of the randomly selected plants. But, the mean seed weight of the plants selected for large seeds was not significantly heavier than the randomly selected plants.Öğe Seed germination rate in lentil (lens culinaris) with chalky spotted(Parlar Scientific Publications, 2017) Bicer B.T.; Toncer O.; Kavak H.; Akinci C.The chalky spot syndrome is a serious seed-quality problem in red lentil in the southeast Anatolia of Turkey. This research was carried out to determine the chalky spot rate and its effect on the seed germination in twenty lentil genotypes. Germination tests as three groups performed; (i) seeds from damaged location were cleaned, and two groups were divided as damaged and non-damaged, (ii) all seeds from damaged location, and (iii) seeds from non-damaged location. Chalky spot rate among genotypes ranged from 11.0 to 42.92%. Mean of germination speed in damaged seeds was 46.88%, and ranged from 20 to 66% in damaged seeds. Mean of germination speed in non-damaged seeds was 84.5%. Chalky spotted seed rate strongly reduced germination rate. © by PSP.