Abstract

Sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], is believed to be originated in Ethiopia and Sudan. Although, many morphological and molecular diversity studies reveal the existence of genetic variations with sorghum populations, their distribution within basic races were not considered. Hence, the present study aimed to analyze the extent and distribution of genetic variation within basic Ethiopian sorghum landraces using SSR markers. A total of 107 landraces obtained from Ethiopian Biodiversity Institute (EBI) representing 12 ecological zones grouped according to their race types based on inflorescence and spiklet on field at their maturity time. Twelve SSR markers revealed a total of 110 alleles with average polymorphic content of 0.76 and the allele frequencies show 42 of them were rare (less than 0.05), 22 ranged from 0.05 to 0.1, while 46 of them were higher than 0.1. Expected and observed heterozygosity were 0.78 and 0.2, respectively. The genetic differentiation between populations were also moderate (FST=0.07 for races and 0.13 for E/zones) indicating continuous exchange of genes among them. Partitioning the total genetic variation also indicated 61.38 and 55.17% of the variations were among individuals within racial and zonal populations, respectively. Neighbor-Joining cluster analysis also indicated four major grouping of the landraces according to their racial groups where majority of race caudatum and durra form separate groups while intermediate durra-bicolor form two separate sub-clusters. Overall locus, the intra-racial population diversity showed the greatest genetic diversity (He=0.77 and 0.75) among race dura-bicolor and caudatum, respectively. Information with sorghum races along their important agronomic traits could be used for conservation and future breeding programs of sorghum.   Key words: Sorghum bicolor, races, genetic diversity, SSR.

Highlights

  • Sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], a cultivated diploid (2n = 20) tropical cereal C4 grass plant, is the fifth most important cereal crop grown in the world

  • It is lower than Cuevas and Prom (2013) population structure and diversity study for 137 Ethiopian germplasm conserved at USDA-ARS National Plant Germplasm System, that is 14 per locus

  • The racial classification among S. bicolor could be used for in-situ and ex-situ conservation and genetic dissimilarity with their respective agronomic characteristics favors the future crops germplasm breeding programs

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Summary

Introduction

Sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench], a cultivated diploid (2n = 20) tropical cereal C4 grass plant, is the fifth most important cereal crop grown in the world. It is a monocotyledon plant of tropical origin, belonging to Poaceae family. Its wide adaptation to harsh environments, tolerance to stress conditions, diverse germplasm collections and its small genome size (710 Mb) made sorghum as an important botanical model crop for many tropical grasseswith complex genomes, which employ C4 photosynthesis. Sorghum is the first crop genome of African origin to be sequenced (Dogget, 1965; Council, 1996)

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