Abstract

BackgroundBamboo is among the important plants that help shape the socio-economic fabric of rural India. It provides employment, sustains business ventures, has medicinal applications and even helps in carbon sequestration. Out of 125 indigenous species, Dendrocalamus strictus (Roxb.) Nees occupies 53% of the area of bamboo in the country. Moreover, D. strictus may be used in afforestation of wastelands and rural development programmes due to its adaptability in wider landscapes. Dendrocalamus strictus has different growth forms based on edaphic factors and climatic conditions. DNA profiling was used to analyse the genetic diversity among the different growth forms of D. strictus present in three different locations of Uttarakhand.MethodsThe study area includes three locations, first, reserve forest of the Forest Research Institute (FRI), Dehradun; second, Shivpuri near Byasi, Rishikesh; and third, Chiriapur range (Haridwar district). A standard method was used to isolate DNA from young leaves from ten clumps of each growth form. Ten RAPD primers were screened for polymorphism from A and N operon primers and a standard PCR protocol was followed to amplify and visualise DNA bands. The data matrix was analysed and interpreted using statistical software and methods.ResultsThe cluster analysis, genetic structure parameters, moderate coefficient of gene differentiation and low gene flow value all indicated that these growth forms are genetically dissimilar and that geographic separation as well as physiological/flowering barriers has influenced these variations. These genetically different growth forms can be called ecotypes.ConclusionsSuch a study has not been attempted previously with bamboo and will help inform the conservation of the genetic pool of bamboo ecotypes. Seeds of these ecotypes are monocarpic in nature, which means that bamboo plants flower once in their lifetime, so they must be collected and multiplied (as plantations) in their respective habitats.

Highlights

  • Bamboo is among the important plants that help shape the socio-economic fabric of rural India

  • Such a study has not been attempted previously with bamboo and will help inform the conservation of the genetic pool of bamboo ecotypes. Seeds of these ecotypes are monocarpic in nature, which means that bamboo plants flower once in their lifetime, so they must be collected and multiplied in their respective habitats

  • Seven Randomly Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) primers were screened for polymorphism using A and N operon primer kits (Operon Technologies Inc., Alameda, California, USA) (Nayak et al, 2003)

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Summary

Introduction

Bamboo is among the important plants that help shape the socio-economic fabric of rural India. It provides employment, sustains business ventures, has medicinal applications and even helps in carbon sequestration. Out of 125 indigenous species, Dendrocalamus strictus (Roxb.) Nees occupies 53% of the area of bamboo in the country. Dendrocalamus strictus has different growth forms based on edaphic factors and climatic conditions. Bamboos are a type of plant that play a major role in the total forest cover (21.1%) of the Indian sub-continent, contributing 12.8% to the total forest area of the country (Forest Survey of India 2011). Bamboo plantations can contribute as an important component of the ambitious Greening India Programme (2010–2020; http://www.thehindu.com/news /national/green-india-mission-to-double-afforestation-ef forts-by-2020/article438506.ece)

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