3 research outputs found
Not Available
Not AvailableA total of 130 flax accessions of diverse morphotypes and worldwide origin were assessed
for genetic diversity and population structure using 11 morphological traits and
microsatellite markers (15 gSSRs and 7 EST–SSRs). Analysis performed after classifying
these accessions on the basis of plant height, branching pattern, seed size, Indian/foreign
origin into six categories called sub-populations viz. fibre type exotic, fibre type
indigenous, intermediate type exotic, intermediate type indigenous, linseed type exotic
and linseed type indigenous. The study assessed different diversity indices, AMOVA,
population structure and included a principal coordinate analysis based on different
marker systems. The highest diversity was exhibited by gSSR markers (SI = 0.46; He = 0.31;
P = 85.11). AMOVA based on all markers explained significant difference among fibre type,
intermediate type and linseed type populations of flax. In terms of variation explained by
different markers, EST-SSR markers (12%) better differentiated flax populations compared
to morphological (9%) and gSSR (6%) markers at P = 0.01. The maximum Nei’s unbiased
genetic distance (D = 0.11) was observed between fibre type and linseed type exotic subpopulations based on EST-SSR markers. The combined structure analysis by using all
markers grouped Indian fibre type accessions (63.4%) in a separate cluster along with the
Indian intermediate type (48.7%), whereas Indian accessions (82.16%) of linseed type
constituted an independent cluster. These findings were supported by the results of the
principal coordinate analysis. Morphological markers employed in the study found
complementary with microsatellite based markers in deciphering genetic diversity and
population structure of the flax germplasmNot Availabl