Agronomy (Jul 2023)
Nonlinear Mixed-Effect Models to Describe Growth Curves of Pepper Fruits in Eight Cultivars Including Group Effects
Abstract
Evaluating the behavior of fruit width and length characters throughout the pepper crop cycle is essential for researchers in decision-making aimed at developing appropriate management techniques and harvesting fruits at proper growth stages. The Nonlinear Mixed-Effect Models (NLME) method is recommended to jointly model the residuals and the entire database, including group effects, to describe growth curves. This work compared four nonlinear equations (Gompertz, Logistic, Richards, and von Bertalanffy) by including groups (pepper and bell pepper) to describe the pepper genotypes’ length and width growth. Of the eight genotypes used, three were bell pepper, and five were pepper. For each, fruit length and width were measured in 10 periods. According to the fit-quality measures studied, the best model for adjusting the length of the fruit was the Richards (Radj.2=0.9960), while for the width, it was the Logistic (Radj.2=0.9957). The estimated random effects showed that for asymptotic length and time to the inflection point presented a correlation of 0.75, indicating a positive association between these traits. For width, however, this result was different: −0.02. NLME adjustment allowed efficient prediction of values and efficient characterization of the studied genotypes, proving to be an efficient method for longitudinal data.
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