Abstract
Nine oat cultivars and experimental lines from four diverse germ plasm sources were crossed in a diallel mating design, without reciprocals. Heterosis for grain yield was evaluated in two experiments and 48 F2-derived lines from each of the 36 matings were evaluated for bundle weight, grain yield, straw yield, harvest index, and heading date in two experiments. The number of transgressive segregates per trait and generalized genetic variances were calculated for each mating. Euclidean distance between parents was calculated by using the first five principal components of the parental correlation matrix. The distance measures of W. D. Hanson and E. Cass (1968. Biometrics, 24:867-880) and T. S. Cervantes, M. M. Goodman, E. Casas, and J. O. Rawlings (1978, Genetics, 90:339-348) were calculated for each of two experiments. The relationships between the three distance measures and the three types of breeding behavior were examined via correlation and regression. Euclidean distance was negatively correlated with transgressive segregation and generalized genetic variances. Hanson and Casas'' distance measure was positively correlated with transgressive segregation and generalized genetic variances. The distance measure of Cervantes et al. was negatively correlated with heterosis in one experiment. Regressions on the three distances measures, when significant, were linear. The single exception was the regression of heterosis on Euclidean distance, which had significant linear and quadratic coefficients and high R2. No distance measure was closely associated with all three types of breeding behavior. Using information from more than one measure improved the R2 value for polynomial regressions.

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