Genetic diversity of American wild rice species

Authors

  • Elizabeth Ann Veasey USP; ESALQ; Depto. de Genética
  • Eduardo de Andrade Bressan USP; CENA; Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biologia na Agricultura e no Ambiente
  • Maria Imaculada Zucchi APTA; Polo Apta Centro Sul
  • Roland Vencovsky USP; ESALQ; Depto. de Genética
  • Daruska Cavalcante Cardim Serviço Municipal de Saneamento Ambiental de Santo André
  • Rainério Meireles da Silva UFPA; Centro Agropecuário

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162011000400008

Keywords:

Oryza glumaepatula, O. latifolia, O. grandiglumis, Amazon, genetic structure

Abstract

Studies on genetic diversity and genetic structure of natural populations are important in order to define strategies for in situ and ex situ conservation actions and for plant pre-breeding programs. Aiming to assess the genetic diversity and genetic structure of three wild American Oryza species with isozyme markers, 14 populations of the diploid O. glumaepatula (AglAgl), 11 populations of the tetraploid O. grandiglumis (CCDD) and five populations of the also tetraploid O. latifolia (CCDD) were studied. They were all originated from Rio Paraguay hydrographic basin and the Amazon. Four enzymes were used and they gave 40 polymorphic bands. The most polymorphic species was O. glumaepatula, followed by O. latifolia and O. grandiglumis. A cluster analysis with the Jaccard similarity coefficient separated the diploid from the two tetraploid species, and also the two tetraploid species. This separation was also evident on a scatter plot from a principal component analysis, suggesting that they should be treated as two separate species, although further studies are necessary to provide support for this affirmative. The AMOVA analyses showed a high intrapopulational variability for O. latifolia (67.6%) and O. grandiglumis (52.2%), when compared to their interpopulational variability (32.4% and 47.8%, respectively), which suggests the hypothesis of a higher degree of outcrossing events within these species. When studying the correlation between the Jaccard dissimilarity coefficient and geographic distances, a spatial genetic structure was observed for O. glumaepatula only. These results are important for defining strategies of both in situ and ex situ conservation.

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Published

2011-08-01

Issue

Section

Genetics and Plant Breeding

How to Cite

Genetic diversity of American wild rice species . (2011). Scientia Agricola, 68(4), 440-446. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162011000400008