Abstract

BackgroundCitrus represents a substantial income for farmers in the Mediterranean Basin. However, the Mediterranean citrus industry faces increasing biotic and abiotic constraints. Therefore the breeding and selection of new rootstocks are now of the utmost importance. In Tunisia, in addition to sour orange, the most widespread traditional rootstock of the Mediterranean area, other citrus rootstocks and well adapted to local environmental conditions, are traditionally used and should be important genetic resources for breeding. To characterize the diversity of Tunisian citrus rootstocks, two hundred and one local accessions belonging to four facultative apomictic species (C. aurantium, sour orange; C. sinensis, orange; C. limon, lemon; and C. aurantifolia, lime) were collected and genotyped using 20 nuclear SSR markers and four indel mitochondrial markers. Multi-locus genotypes (MLGs) were compared to references from French and Spanish collections.ResultsThe differentiation of the four varietal groups was well-marked. The groups displayed a relatively high allelic diversity, primarily due to very high heterozygosity. Sixteen distinct MLGs were identified. Ten of these were noted in sour oranges. However, the majority of the analysed sour orange accessions corresponded with only two MLGs, differentiated by a single allele, likely due to a mutation. The most frequent MLG is shared with the reference sour oranges. No polymorphism was found within the sweet orange group. Two MLGs, differentiated by a single locus, were noted in lemon. The predominant MLG was shared with the reference lemons. Limes were represented by three genotypes. Two corresponded to the 'Mexican lime' and 'limonette de Marrakech' references. The MLG of 'Chiiri' lime was unique.ConclusionsThe Tunisian citrus rootstock genetic diversity is predominantly due to high heterozygosity and differentiation between the four varietal groups. The phenotypic diversity within the varietal groups has resulted from multiple introductions, somatic mutations and rare sexual recombination events. Finally, this diversity study enabled the identification of a core sample of accessions for further physiological and agronomical evaluations. These core accessions will be integrated into citrus rootstock breeding programs for the Mediterranean Basin.

Highlights

  • Citrus represents a substantial income for farmers in the Mediterranean Basin

  • Combining sour orange with commercial citrus varieties results in trees that are sensitive to Citrus Tristeza Virus (CTV), causing the rapid decline and death of the trees grafted on sour orange rootstocks

  • Sour orange Multi-locus genotypes (MLGs) I showed 12 alleles that were not observed in the sour orange references, these 12 alleles are present in sweet oranges. These results suggest that G and I are hybrids of sour orange and mandarin, and of sour orange and sweet orange, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Citrus represents a substantial income for farmers in the Mediterranean Basin. the Mediterranean citrus industry faces increasing biotic and abiotic constraints. In Tunisia, in addition to sour orange, the most widespread traditional rootstock of the Mediterranean area, other citrus rootstocks and well adapted to local environmental conditions, are traditionally used and should be important genetic resources for breeding. Oranges represent the majority of citrus production (54% in 2009) with over 67 million tons in 2009 [1]. As CTV spreads throughout the Mediterranean basin, citrus production on sour orange rootstock will soon be uneconomic. Rootstocks selected for their resistance to CTV are not well adapted to other local constraints [2]. There is an urgent need to diversify and select new citrus rootstocks exhibiting CTV resistance and adaptation to the regional abiotic stresses

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