Abstract

Colonial bentgrass (Agrostis capillaris L.) is a cool-season grass, native to temperate Asia and Europe. It has good tolerance to low temperatures and partial shade and is well suited to golf course fairways and tees. Little information is available regarding levels and patterns of genetic variation among populations of colonial bentgrass, which would be useful for breeding programs. To study the genetic relationships among 27 colonial bentgrass accessions obtained from the US National Plant Germplasm System (NPGS), randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers were scored and analyzed. Out of 80 primers screened, 16 were selected for further analysis, which yielded a total of 120 polymorphic bands used to differentiate the accessions. Dice's similarity coefficients for pair-wise comparisons ranged from 0.23 to 0.84 based on the RAPD data. Since there was no similarity coefficient value close to 1 between any two accessions, there was no apparent duplication among the sampled accessions. A dendrogram constructed on the basis of the Unweighted Pair Group Method with Arithmetic average (UPGMA) clustering algorithm clearly separated 26 of the accessions into three clusters with one accession distinct from the rest. The least similar pair of accessions was PI 204397 from Turkey and PI 628720 from Bulgaria, and the most similar pair was PI 509437 from Romania and PI 491264 from Finland. Clustering patterns based on principal components analysis (PCA) corresponded well with the dendrogram. A high cophenetic correlation (r = 0.82) was found between the RAPD data matrix and cophenetic matrix. The accession PI 628720, from Bulgaria, did not cluster with any other accessions.

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