Reference : Genetic Structure Of Quinoa (Chenopodium Quinoa Willd.) From The Bolivian Altiplano As R...
Scientific journals : Article
Life sciences : Agriculture & agronomy
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/25072
Genetic Structure Of Quinoa (Chenopodium Quinoa Willd.) From The Bolivian Altiplano As Revealed By Rapd Markers
English
Del Castillo, C. [> > > >]
Winkel, T. [> > > >]
Mahy, Grégory mailto [Université de Liège > > Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech >]
Bizoux, Jean-Philippe mailto [Université de Liège > > Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech >]
2007
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution
54
4
897-905
International
0925-9864
[en] Chenopodium quinoa ; Genetic diversity ; genetic structure
[en] Quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa Willd.) is a pseudocereal originated from the Andes important for small farmers’ food security as well as for commercial production. Recently, it has been claimed that in Bolivia genetic erosion could result from the marginalization of the crop in the north and from its commercial standardization in the south. The aim of this study was to quantify the hierarchical structure of the genetic variation present in eight quinoa field populations, consisting
of cultivated and weedy individuals, representative of the altiplano and interandean valleys of Bolivia. Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA markers show that quinoa has a strong population structure and a high intra-population variation. An effect of geographical structure of
the populations was highlighted, due to population isolation, not simply linked to distance but more probably to climatic and orographic barriers present in the studied zone. The population structure is also reinforced by the limited seed exchanges among farmers as revealed by field interviews. This population structure appears related to three major biogeographic zones: the northern and central altiplano, the interandean valley, and the southern Salar. Intrapopulation genetic diversity was higher than that expected for a mainly autogamous species, and higher than
that reported in anterior studies based on germplasm collections. These results are commented in view of current knowledge on phylogeny and reproductive biology of the species, and their implications regarding genetic resources management are discussed.
Researchers ; Professionals
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/25072
10.1007/s10722-006-9151-z
http://www.springerlink.com/content/p74828q67583x946/?p=f6a2b75900e04198920212c8dec46e21&pi=0

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