Abstract

BackgroundAmong the cereal crops, barley is the species with the greatest adaptability to a wide range of environments. To determine the level and structure of genetic diversity in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) landraces from the central highlands of Ethiopia, we have examined the molecular variation at seven nuclear microsatellite loci.ResultsA total of 106 landrace populations were sampled in the two growing seasons (Meher and Belg; the long and short rainy seasons, respectively), across three districts (Ankober, Mojanawadera and Tarmaber), and within each district along an altitudinal gradient (from 1,798 to 3,324 m a.s.l). Overall, although significant, the divergence (e.g. FST) is very low between seasons and geographical districts, while it is high between different classes of altitude. Selection for adaptation to different altitudes appears to be the main factor that has determined the observed clinal variation, along with population-size effects.ConclusionsOur data show that barley landraces from Ethiopia are constituted by highly variable local populations (farmer's fields) that have large within-population diversity. These landraces are also shown to be locally adapted, with the major driving force that has shaped their population structure being consistent with selection for adaptation along an altitudinal gradient. Overall, our study highlights the potential of such landraces as a source of useful alleles. Furthermore, these landraces also represent an ideal system to study the processes of adaptation and for the identification of genes and genomic regions that have adaptive roles in crop species.

Highlights

  • IntroductionBarley is the species with the greatest adaptability to a wide range of environments

  • Among the cereal crops, barley is the species with the greatest adaptability to a wide range of environments

  • Level of polymorphism Seven mapped nuclear simple sequence repeats (SSRs) were used to examine the levels and patterns of genetic variation of the barley landraces collected in North Shewa, in the central highlands of Ethiopia [16]

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Summary

Introduction

Barley is the species with the greatest adaptability to a wide range of environments. Barley is the species that presents the highest adaptability to a wide range of environments. Ethiopia is probably the region of barley cultivation that presents the highest variability for climatic and edaphic conditions. It is cultivated from 1,400 m above sea level (a.s.l.) to over 4,000 m a.s.l., and it has adapted to specific sets of agro-ecological and microclimatic regimes throughout the country [3]. The great variability of environmental conditions in Ethiopia that promote adaptive divergence, and the cultivation of barley in two growing seasons per year [16], have probably driven the structure of variation of these landraces

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