Abstract

Bahia is the most important cacao-producing state in Brazil, which is currently the sixth-largest country worldwide to produce cacao seeds. In the eighteenth century, the Comum, Pará and Maranhão varieties of cacao were introduced into southern Bahia, and their descendants, which are called ‘Bahian cacao’ or local Bahian varieties, have been cultivated for over 200 years. Comum plants have been used to start plantations in African countries and extended as far as countries in South Asia and Oceania. In Brazil, two sets of clones selected from Bahian varieties and their mutants, the Agronomic Institute of East (SIAL) and Bahian Cacao Institute (SIC) series, represent the diversity of Bahian cacao in germplasm banks. Because the genetic diversity of Bahian varieties, which is essential for breeding programs, remains unknown, the objective of this work was to assess the genetic structure and diversity of local Bahian varieties collected from farms and germplasm banks. To this end, 30 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers were used to genotype 279 cacao plants from germplasm and local farms. The results facilitated the identification of 219 cacao plants of Bahian origin, and 51 of these were SIAL or SIC clones. Bahian cacao showed low genetic diversity. It could be verified that SIC and SIAL clones do not represent the true diversity of Bahian cacao, with the greatest amount of diversity found in cacao trees on the farms. Thus, a core collection to aid in prioritizing the plants to be sampled for Bahian cacao diversity is suggested. These results provide information that can be used to conserve Bahian cacao plants and applied in breeding programs to obtain more productive Bahian cacao with superior quality and tolerance to major diseases in tropical cacao plantations worldwide.

Highlights

  • Brazil is the most important cacao-producing country in the Americas, with 253,211 tons of cacao beans produced in 2012

  • Because most of the genotypes and clones in this cluster are from Bahia and the cluster has high homogeneity, these plants were considered descendants of the first genotypes introduced into this state

  • Cacao seeds were introduced into Bahia, Brazil in the middle of the eighteenth century, and the descendants of these initial introductions were used to establish most of the commercial cacao farms in Bahia as well as farms in several African countries [10]

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Summary

Introduction

Brazil is the most important cacao-producing country in the Americas, with 253,211 tons of cacao beans produced in 2012 (http://faostat3.fao.org). Sixty-two percent of Brazilian cacao production occurs in the southern part of Bahia, which encompasses approximately 540,000 ha and yields an average of 300 kg/ha [1]. In southern Bahia, approximately 70% of cacao cultivation occurs in cabruca agroforestry systems [2], which are characterized by understory tree species in Atlantic Forests. This system has permitted the conservation of native flora and fauna [3,4]. In this region, the average temperature ranges from 20 to 27°C, and annual rainfall may reach 2,350 mm (http://www.inpe.br/). Because of the abundant rainfall, cacao is produced for approximately nine months per year, and the production season is divided into two harvest periods: the main period from November to February and secondary period (known locally as temporão) from May to September

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