Abstract

In Ethiopia, barley is generally grown in two different planting seasons per year: during the long rainy season (Meher) and the short rainy season (Belg). The aim of the present study was to assess for the first time the role of this ‘two-season system’ on the structure of the genetic diversity of the Ethiopian barley landraces. We characterised 3,170 individual genotypes from 106 landrace populations using eight morphological spike traits. The diversity within population was higher in the season where barley is more important (Belg), and in general, where its cultivation is in larger plots because of weaker ‘competition’ with others crops. This indicates that barley diversity has a complex relationship with variations in the surrounding agro-ecosystem. Overall, the divergence between the two seasons was quite small (3.4%), suggesting that seed flow does not occur independently across the years within the two seasons. This would affect the amount of mutations and historic recombination that have accumulated within these populations.

Full Text
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