In crop plants quantitative variation is a feature of many important traits, such as yield, quality or disease resistance. Means of analyzing quantitative variation and especially of uncovering its potential genetic basis are therefore of prime importance for breeding purposes. It has been demonstrated in the early 20th century that such quantitative variation results from the combined action of multiple segregating genes and environmental factors. An intrinsic feature of such traits is, however, that the individual genes contributing to quantitative variation can hardly be distinguished. The genetics of such complex traits is therefore studied in general terms (population means and variances, covariances between progenies, heritabilities a...