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yield-potential

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Yield potential refers to the maximum crop output achievable under ideal growing conditions with no limiting stresses, representing the theoretical ceiling for a plant's productivity. Understanding and closing the gap between yield potential and actual farm yields is a central challenge in plant science, as it guides breeding efforts, agronomic practices, and biotechnological strategies aimed at feeding a growing global population. Researchers study the genetic, physiological, and environmental factors that set yield potential limits, including canopy photosynthesis efficiency, resource partitioning, and grain-filling dynamics.

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Genetic dissection and validation of major and stable QTLs for the flag leaf size-related traits in common wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).

PubMed · 2026-04-29

Scientists identified five key genetic regions in wheat that reliably control flag leaf size across multiple environments, and developed molecular tools to help breeders select for larger, more productive leaves — potentially boosting wheat yields.

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Five major, stable genetic regions (QTLs) were identified controlling flag leaf length, width, area, and shape ratio, each explaining 10–16% of the trait variation on average.

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A genetic map of 11,583 markers was built and used to map 97–273 QTLs across six environments using three different statistical methods.

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Three KASP molecular markers closely linked to these QTLs were validated in independent populations and shown to have a pyramiding effect — stacking multiple favorable loci progressively increases flag leaf size.