Abstract

Myrtle is an important plant species of the Mediterranean maquis, and is widely exploited for its aromatic properties. It is used in Italy for the production of a typical liqueur, for cut foliage and as an ornamental pot plant. We report the use of amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) profiling to estimate genetic similarities within myrtle germplasm collected from six Italian regions, and from the Botanical Gardens of six other Mediterranean countries (including the outgroup Myrtus communis subsp. tarentina). Five AFLP primer combinations identified 122 polymorphic fragments analysing 92 individual samples, most of them (56%) were informative in discriminating among the populations. The AFLP patterns indicated that the majority of the variation occurs among rather than within populations ( G ST = 0.61). A neighbour-joining (NJ) tree separated the populations into two main branches: the first one grouped some of the Italian populations with those from Spain and Portugal; the second one included a Southern Italian subcluster together with samples from Greece, Israel, France and Croatia. A principal coordinate analysis supported the two major branches identified in the NJ analysis and showed the separation of Western and Eastern Mediterranean populations along the first axis. The Italian populations did not cluster in a single clade, but rather form distinct regional groups. The present analysis suggests that Italy represents a botanical transition zone between the Western and Eastern Mediterranean region in Myrtus communis.

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