Abstract
Large collections of the forage and bioenergy grass Dactylis glomerata were made in northwest (NW) Europe along east to west and north to south clines for genetic resource conservation and to inform breeding programmes of genetic diversity, genepools, and ploidy. Leaves were sampled for genetic analysis and seed and rhizome for ex-situ conservation. Genotyping by sequencing (GBS) was used to assay nuclear DNA diversity and plastome single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) discovery was undertaken using a long-read PCR and MiSeq approach. Nuclear and plastid SNPs were analysed by principal component analysis (PCA) to compare genotypes. Flow cytometry revealed that all samples were tetraploid, but some genome size variation was recorded. GBS detected an average of approximately 10,000 to 15,000 SNPs per country sampled. The highest average number of private SNPs was recorded in Poland (median ca. 2000). Plastid DNA variation was also high (1466 SNPs, 17 SNPs/kbp). GBS data, and to a lesser extent plastome data, also show that genetic variation is structured geographically in NW Europe with loose clustering matching the country of plant origin. The results reveal extensive genetic diversity and genetic structuring in this versatile allogamous species despite lack of ploidy variation and high levels of human mediated geneflow via planting.
Highlights
Dactylis glomerata L. is a tufted C3 photosynthetic perennial species that is classified within the grass tribe Poeae [1,2,3]
Formatted: We demonstrate the utility of Genotyping by sequencing (GBS) [44] to study nuclear DNA variation within the collections and Not Highlight variation, ploidy and genetic/genepool structure
The GBS analysis generated a total of 10,744 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) across all genotypes
Summary
Dactylis glomerata L. (cock’s foot; orchard grass) is a tufted C3 photosynthetic perennial species that is classified within the grass tribe Poeae [1,2,3]. (cock’s foot; orchard grass) is a tufted C3 photosynthetic perennial species that is classified within the grass tribe Poeae [1,2,3] It is one of the most important forages in the world [4] and is under investigation for biomass and bioenergy [5]. Dactylis glomerata has a circumpolar southern-temperate distribution and is native to Eurasia and North Africa [10] It is commonly found naturalized outside of its native range and breeding material has been introduced into many areas for modern-day forage systems [11]. It is a significant contributor to ecosystem function [12]
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