4.3 Article

Assessing the Diversity of Sea Beet (Beta vulgaris L. ssp. maritima) Populations

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 685-698

Publisher

TARBIAT MODARES UNIV

Keywords

Crop wild relatives; Genetic resources; Morphological traits; SSRs; Sugar beet

Funding

  1. program Life
  2. program FEDER
  3. Madeiran Operacional Program [LIFE RECOVER NATURA - LIFE12 NAT/PT/000195, CASBio M1420-01-0145-FEDER-000011]
  4. Agencia Regional para o Desenvolvimento da Investigacao, Tecnologia e Inovacao, Portugal 2020
  5. European Union through the European Social Fund [M1420-09-5369-FSE000002]
  6. Erasmus grant [14888]

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Sea beet, a morphologically and genetically variable species, is a valuable genetic resource for resistance improvement in beets. Characterization of Madeiran sea beet populations revealed high quantitative variation among populations, with plant height and inflorescence height parameters having the greatest influence on population separation. Molecular analysis using SSRs showed genetic variability between populations, with PCA and PCoA identifying three clusters based on morphological and genetic traits, highlighting the influence of specific environmental conditions on genetic variability and the potential for these populations to be gene sources for sugar beet breeding programs.
Beta vulgaris L. subsp. maritima (L.) Arcang., sea beet, is a morphologically and genetically variable species, belonging to beet primary gene-pool. This crop wild relative is a valuable genetic resource for resistance improvement in beets and could play an important role in crop yield sustainability. Eleven Madeiran sea beet populations were characterized using morphological descriptors and genetic markers. Our goal was to evaluate these populations as a potential source of valuable genetic material. Morphological characterization showed a high quantitative variation among populations. Plant height and inflorescence height parameters had the highest influence in the separation of populations. Molecular analysis was performed with polymorphic SSRs to determine genetic variability between populations. Both PCA and PCoA revealed three clusters that separated the populations according to morphological and genetic traits, respectively. This study contributes to the knowledge of sea beet diversity in Madeira's archipelago and to the perception that the islands' specific environmental conditions influence its genetic variability, making these populations a possible gene source for sugar beet breeding programs

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