Abstract

Knowledge of genetic diversity within crop species and the nature of their breeding systems are critical for crop improvement. These determine the appropriate species specific breeding methodologies to deploy. Genetic diversity analysis is an ongoing process in the breeding programmes of ‘major crops’, which is used to direct or re-direct breeding objectives (especially selection of parental lines). In this regard, the importance of such information in ‘underutilised’ or ‘minor’ crop species, which largely exist as landraces with little information about their genetic diversity and breeding systems, becomes very important. One such important underutilized crop species which could contribute positively to global food security is Bambara groundnut (Vigna subterranea (L.) Verdc.). We present here an overview of the past two decades of genetic diversity analysis of Bambara groundnut landraces. Various genetic diversity analyses of the available germplasm for the crop using phenotypic descriptors and molecular marker technologies have been reported. Generally, most of these studies lack adequate representation of the available global germplasm. For those studies that involved relatively a large germplasm collections (above 100; sampled from different agro-ecologies) the marker density employed in these analyses has been so far relatively low. Specifically, for breeding systems, high genetic diversity and low heterozygosity have been reported across the germplasm analysed in this highly cleistogamous species. In terms of population structure, the West African and the Southern African accessions appear as distinct clusters. This raises the possibility of the southern African region a secondary centre of domestication or diversity for the crop.

Highlights

  • Plant breeding is defined as the art of crop improvement (Acquaah 2007)

  • We present here an overview of the past two decades of genetic diversity analysis of Bambara groundnut landraces

  • For Bambara groundnut, the use of molecular markers to assess the level of inter- and intra-landrace polymorphism in collections of the crop has been noted as critical to enable their effective utilization in future breeding programmes (Massawe et al 2005, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

Plant breeding is defined as the art of crop improvement (Acquaah 2007). Similar to the practice of an art, the availability of requisite tools and resources as well as the creative act of their combination to achieve identified objectives is critical. For Bambara groundnut, the use of molecular markers to assess the level of inter- and intra-landrace polymorphism in collections of the crop has been noted as critical to enable their effective utilization in future breeding programmes (Massawe et al 2005, 2007). A number of quantitative phenotypic traits have been listed in the standard descriptor set (IPGRI/IITA/ BAMNET 2000) for Bambara groundnut and some have been extensively reported (Ntundu et al 2006; Ouedraogo et al 2008; Abu and Buah 2011; Olukolu et al 2012; Jonah et al 2012; Aliyu and Massawe 2013; Shego et al 2013; Molosiwa et al 2015).

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