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PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. e0252792
Author(s):  
Maria Miguel Castro ◽  
Daniela Rosa ◽  
Ana M. Ferro ◽  
Ana Faustino ◽  
Ana Paulino ◽  
...  

Cynara cardunculus L. is a cardoon species native to the Mediterranean region, which is composed of three botanical taxa, each having distinct biological characteristics. The aim of this study was to examine wild populations of C. cardunculus established in Portugal, in order to determine their genetic diversity, geographic distribution, and population structure. Based on SSR markers, 121 individuals of C. cardunculus from 17 wild populations of the Portuguese Alentejo region were identified and analysed. Ten SSRs were found to be efficient markers in the genetic diversity analysis. The total number of alleles ranged from 9 to 17 per locus. The expected and observed means in heterozygosity, by population analysed, were 0.591 and 0.577, respectively. The wild population exhibited a high level of genetic diversity at the species level. The highest proportion of genetic variation was identified within a geographic group, while variation was lower among groups. Geographic areas having highest genetic diversity were identified in Alvito, Herdade da Abóboda, Herdade da Revilheira and Herdade de São Romão populations. Moreover, significant genetic differentiation existed between wild populations from North-Alentejo geographic locations (Arraiolos, Évora, Monte da Chaminé) and Centro Hortofrutícola, compared with other populations. This study reports genetic diversity among a representative number of wild populations and genotypes of C. cardunculus from Portugal. These results will provide valuable information towards future management of C. cardunculus germplasm.


Genetics ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 140 (2) ◽  
pp. 733-744
Author(s):  
R H Podolsky ◽  
T P Holtsford

Abstract Studies of genetic variation at allozyme loci, assumed to be selectively neutral, have provided valuable insights into the genetic structure of numerous populations. The degree to which population structure of allozyme variation reflects that of quantitative traits, however, is not well resolved. Here, we compare estimates of population differentiation (FST) of 11 populations for allozymes with those for nine discrete and nine continuous morphological traits. Overall, the allozymes have the lowest FST estimates, indicating relatively little population differentiation. Excepting two traits, petal width and long internode length, the continuous morphological traits have estimates similar to those from allozymes. The discrete morphological traits tend to have the highest estimates. On a single trait basis, estimates of FST for four discrete and two continuous traits are higher than those for allozymes. A more detailed (narrow-sense quantitative) genetic study of two populations suggests that these estimates of FST may underestimate the true value because of dominance. Clustering analyses show that the pattern of differentiation for the discrete morphological traits strongly reflects the geographical distribution of the populations, whereas the patterns for the continuous traits and allozymes do not. These results suggest that selection has been occurring on the discrete morphological traits, selecting toward a common optimum within each geographic group, and optima differing among geographic groups.


1980 ◽  
Vol 37 (10) ◽  
pp. 1499-1504 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Wakabayashi ◽  
S. Egusa ◽  
J. L. Fryer

The morphological, physiological, and serological characteristics of 15 cultures of filamentous bacteria isolated in Japan (five isolates) and Oregon from cultured salmonids suffering from bacterial gill disease were determined and compared. The strains from each area were uniform in characteristics and apart from minor differences in temperature and salinity tolerances, each geographic group of isolates was physiologically similar. Serologically, however, although all strains possessed a common antigen, the Japanese and Oregon strains were distinct. It was found that all strains could readily colonize the gill epithelium of juvenile rainbow trout causing an asymptomatic infection, but in some experiments fatal gill disease was irregularly produced.Key words: bacterial gill disease, filamentous bacteria, salmonids


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