Research Article | Open Access
Volume 2024 |Article ID 0215 | https://doi.org/10.34133/plantphenomics.0215

Phenomic Selection for Hybrid Rapeseed Breeding

Lennard Roscher-Ehrig ,1,5 Sven E. Weber,1,5 Amine Abbadi,2 Milka Malenica,2 Stefan Abel,3 Reinhard Hemker,3 Rod J. Snowdon,1 Benjamin Wittkop,1 and Andreas Stahl4

1Department of Plant Breeding, Justus Liebig University, Giessen, Germany
2NPZ Innovation GmbH, Holtsee, Germany
3Limagrain GmbH, Peine-Rosenthal, Germany
4Julius Kuehn Institute (JKI), Federal Research Centre for Cultivated Plants, Institute for Resistance Research and Stress Tolerance, Quedlinburg, Germany
5These authors contributed equally to this work

Received 
30 Jan 2024
Accepted 
19 Jun 2024
Published
24 Jul 2024

Abstract

Phenomic selection is a recent approach suggested as a low-cost, high-throughput alternative to genomic selection. Instead of using genetic markers, it employs spectral data to predict complex traits using equivalent statistical models. Phenomic selection has been shown to outperform genomic selection when using spectral data that was obtained within the same generation as the traits that were predicted. However, for hybrid breeding, the key question is whether spectral data from parental genotypes can be used to effectively predict traits in the hybrid generation. Here, we aimed to evaluate the potential of phenomic selection for hybrid rapeseed breeding. We performed predictions for various traits in a structured population of 410 test hybrids, grown in multiple environments, using near-infrared spectroscopy data obtained from harvested seeds of both the hybrids and their parental lines with different linear and nonlinear models. We found that phenomic selection within the hybrid generation outperformed genomic selection for seed yield and plant height, even when spectral data was collected at single locations, while being less affected by population structure. Furthermore, we demonstrate that phenomic prediction across generations is feasible, and selecting hybrids based on spectral data obtained from parental genotypes is competitive with genomic selection. We conclude that phenomic selection is a promising approach for rapeseed breeding that can be easily implemented without any additional costs or efforts as near-infrared spectroscopy is routinely assessed in rapeseed breeding.

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