Abstract

BackgroundAvocado is an important cash crop in Tanzania, however its genetic diversity is not thoroughly investigated. This study was undertaken to explore the genetic diversity of avocado in the southern highlands using microsatellite markers. A total of 226 local avocado trees originating from seeds were sampled in eight districts of the Mbeya, Njombe and Songwe regions. Each district was considered as a population. The diversity at 10 microsatellite loci was investigated.ResultsA total of 167 alleles were detected across the 10 loci with an average of 16.7 ± 1.3 alleles per locus. The average expected and observed heterozygosity were 0.84 ± 0.02 and 0.65 ± 0.04, respectively. All but two loci showed a significant deviation from the Hardy-Weinberg principle. Analysis of molecular variance showed that about 6% of the variation was partitioned among the eight geographic populations. Population FST pairwise comparisons revealed lack of genetic differentiation for the seven of 28 population pairs tested. The principal components analysis (PCA) and hierarchical cluster analysis showed a mixing of avocado trees from different districts. The model-based STRUCTURE subdivided the trees samples into four major genetic clusters.ConclusionHigh diversity detected in the analysed avocado germplasm implies that this germplasm is a potentially valuable source of variable alleles that might be harnessed for genetic improvement of this crop in Tanzania. The mixing of avocado trees from different districts observed in the PCA and dendrogram points to strong gene flow among the avocado populations, which led to population admixture revealed in the STRUCTURE analysis. However, there is still significant differentiation among the tree populations from different districts that can be utilized in the avocado breeding program.

Highlights

  • Avocado is an important cash crop in Tanzania, its genetic diversity is not thoroughly investigated

  • The results showed that the sampled plants can be regrouped into four clusters based on their genetic characteristics detected at the 10 studied loci

  • High diversity was detected in the analysed avocado germplasm based on standard and molecular diversity indices

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Summary

Introduction

Avocado is an important cash crop in Tanzania, its genetic diversity is not thoroughly investigated. Codominant, multi-allelic, highly reproducible and transferable among related species, SSR genetic markers have been widely used for estimating gene flow, diversity, crossing over rates and evolution for uncovering intraspecific genetic relatedness [13,14,15,16]. They have been used in linkage map construction, for quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping and marker assisted selection, for DNA fingerprinting of cultivars and for estimation of the degree of kinship between genotypes [17, 18]

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