To further identify agronomic traits influencing mechanical shelling quality in peanut and explore their genetic basis, this study evaluated 63 advanced-generation lines and focused on three pod- or kernel-related traits: shelling percentage, pod crushing force, and kernel crushing force. Correlation analysis revealed that only kernel crushing force was significantly associated with the damaged kernel rate. Two lines (D9 and E10) with low damaged kernel rates (qKCF7 and qKCF16.1, were stably expressed across multiple environments, with favorable alleles derived from Huayu 36. In addition, 12 pairs of epistatic QTLs involving 24 SNP intervals were detected, explaining 1.55% to 4.01% of the phenotypic variation. These findings provide valuable genetic targets and germplasm resources for the future genetic improvement of traits related to mechanical shelling quality in peanut.
ZHANG et al. (Fri,) studied this question.