M. D. Hayward’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Plant Breeding: Principles and prospects
  • Book

January 1993

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246 Reads

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90 Citations

M. D. Hayward

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N. O. Bosemark

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I. Romagosa

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M. Cerezo

Our requirement for plant breeders to be successful has never been greater. However one views the forecasted numbers for future population growth we will need, in the immediate future, to be feeding, clothing and housing many more people than we do, inadequately, at present. Plant breeding represents the most valuable strategy in increasing our productivity in a way that is sustainable and environmentally sensitive. Plant breeding can rightly be considered as one of the oldest multidisciplinary subjects that is known to humans. It was practised by people who first started to carry out a settled form of agriculture. The art, as it must have been at that stage, was applied without any formal underlying framework, but achieved dramatic results, as witnessed by the forms of cultivated plants we have today. We are now learning how to apply successfully the results of yet imperfect scientific knowledge. This knowledge is, however, rapidly developing, particularly in areas of tissue culture, biotechnology and molecular biology. Plant breeding's inherent multifaceted nature means that alongside obvious subject areas like genetics we also need to consider areas such as: statistics, physiology, plant pathology, entomology, biochemistry, weed science, quality, seed characteristics, repro­ ductive biology, trial design, selection and computing. It therefore seems apparent that modern plant breeders need to have a grasp of wide range of scientific knowledge and expertise if they are successfully to a exploit the techniques, protocols and strategies which are open to them.

Citations (1)


... F1 hybrid seeds are obtained as a result of crossbreeding between parents with superior characters that are not related in terms of genetic structure. Hybrid seeds obtained by hybridization (Heterosis) can have very different and high-quality characteristics from their parents (mother and father) (Hayward et al., 1993;Kantoğlu, 2014a). For example; yield, quality, resistance to viral and fungal diseases, resistance to pests, adaptability to environmental conditions, etc. ...

Reference:

Determination the effective dose of mutation in pepper (Capsicum annum L.)
Plant Breeding: Principles and prospects
  • Citing Book
  • January 1993