Genetic diversity underlies the improvement of crops by plant breeding.
Land races of rice ( Oryza sativa L.) can contain some valuable
alleles not common in modern germplasm. The aim here was to measure
genetic diversity and its effect on agronomic traits among rice
land-race genotypes grown in Pakistan. Diversity was measured using
thirty-five microsatellite markers and seventy-five genotypes. Among
the markers used a total of 142 alleles were detected at 32 polymorphic
SSR loci, while three loci were monomorphic in Pakistani rice
landraces. The number of alleles identified by each marker ranged from
2 to 13 with a mean of 4.4. Size differences between the smallest and
largest alleles varied from 11bp to 71bp. Polymorphism information
content ranged from 0.124 to 0.836, with an average of 0.569. At nine
microsatellite loci, basmati-type landraces amplified more different
alleles than those in the coarse-type. DNA markers RM70 and RM72
divided the rice landraces on the basis of days to flowering. A
dendrogram based on total microsatellite polymorphism grouped 75
genotypes into four major clusters at 0.40 similarity coefficient,
differentiating tall, late maturing and slender aromatic types from the
short, early and bold non-aromatic ones. It inferred that Pakistani
landraces have diverse genetic bases and can be utilized in future
breeding programs. The DNA markers developed will assist in genotype
identification, purity testing and plant variety protection