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Cultivars of burley and flue-cured tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) differ in chlorophyll content of growing plants and in many chemical components. The present research was undertaken to determine the genetic diversity between burley and flue-cured tobacco for smoke components and the influence of chlorophyll level on the components. A backcrossing program was used to obtain near isogenic lines for all genetic factors except alleles at the two loci controlling chlorophyll level. Comparisons among standard cultivars indicated that burley cultivars were generally higher in tar/puff and nicotine/cigarette puff and lower in number of puffs/cigarette than flue-cured cultivars. The chlorophyll content influenced the level of nine of the 10 cigarette characteristics and accounted for the difference between burley and flue-cured cultivars for number of puffs/cigarette. Diversity between the two classes of cultivars for tar/puff and nicotine/puff was not totally due to chlorophyll differences. Interclass crosses might be useful in breeding improved cultivars for these components.
Key Words: Genetic vulnerability Isogenic lines Cigarette composition Chlorophyll genotypes Genetic diversity Nicotiana tabacum L.
2 Research geneticist, USDA, SEA-AR, Beckley, WV; and research agronomist, USDA, SEA-AR, Oxford, NC, and professor, Dep. of Crop Science, North Carolina State Univ.
Received for publication September 11, 1980.
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