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Genetic diversity of Ethiopian Xanthosoma sagittifolium (L.) Schott accessions assessed with AFLPs



Details zur Publikation
Autor(inn)en:
Wada, E.; Feyissa, T.; Tesfaye, K.; Mueller, C.; Gemeinholzer, B.
Verlag:
SPRINGER

Publikationsjahr:
2018
Zeitschrift:
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution
Seitenbereich:
2095-2105
Jahrgang/Band :
65
Heftnummer:
8
Erste Seite:
2095
Letzte Seite:
2105
Seitenumfang:
11
ISSN:
0925-9864
eISSN:
1573-5109
DOI-Link der Erstveröffentlichung:


Zusammenfassung, Abstract
Xanthosoma sagittifolium (L.) Schott originated from the American tropics. Domestication may have occurred in various places as this Araceae species is an important food source. It has been cultivated for many decades. In this study, Amplified Fragments Length Polymorphism (AFLP) markers were used to analyze the genetic relationships among 78 Ethiopian X. sagittifolium accessions, for conservation purpose. Cormels were collected from Bench-Maji, Kefa, Dawuro and Wolaita zones, representing four populations. The accessions belonged to either green (G) or purple (P) colored leaf and petiole accessions. Three different AFLP primer combinations resulted in 478 scorable bands, of which 99.2% were polymorphic. The mean Nei's gene diversity (He) within populations was 0.35 while the G accessions featured higher He (0.38) than the P ones (0.35). The Nei's gene diversity (He) at entire collection level was 0.38. The detected high genetic diversity may indicate the X. sagittifolium plants growing in the country may derive from diverse parental genotype stock elsewhere and/or there may be multiple introductions to the country. Low levels of genetic differentiation were detected among populations (Gst=0.07) and between the G and P accessions (Gst=0.02). Insignificant genetic and geographic correlation was revealed by Mantel test. Clustering analysis grouped 91% of the accessions together. Conservation and management of X. sagittifolium in the country should concentrate on maintaining high level genetic diversity within each population as well as at entire collection level through both ex situ and in situ conservation actions.


Schlagwörter
AFLP markers, Ethiopia, Xanthosoma sagittifolium


Autor(inn)en / Herausgeber(innen)

Zuletzt aktualisiert 2022-20-04 um 14:51