Abstract

Maintaining germplasm genetic integrity is a key objective of long-term ex situ conservation. Periodic regeneration, performed on limited plots with small number of individuals, increases the risk of genetic drift and genetic diversity changes. In this study, six accessions of white flowered, dry seed pea varieties (Pisum sativum L. subsp. sativum var. sativum): Bohatýr, Klatovský zelený, Hanak, Moravský hrotovický krajový, Raman and Viktoria-75 and four accessions of colour flowered, fodder pea (P. sativum subsp. sativum var. arvense (L.) Poiret: Arvika, Ceský banan, Moravska krajova and Nike, representing Czechoslovak varieties and landraces, bred over the last 40–80 years, were analyzed using ten microsatellite locus specific markers. Each accession was represented by 20 individual seeds of two temporally different samples, spanning the period of 20 or 40 years. Together with intra-accession variation (except of cv. Hanak), evidence of genetic changes, e.g. differences in allele frequencies as well as genetic composition of sample, was detected in six out of ten accessions (Arvika, Bohatýr, Ceský banan, Moravský hrotovický krajový, Moravska krajova and Raman). Evidence of genetic erosion was found in three accessions (Ceský banan, Moravský hrotovický krajový and Raman), while in another three (Arvika, Bohatýr and Moravska krajova) the level of diversity was found to have increased. Moreover in three samples of Bohatýr (2004) and Klatovský zelený (1963 and 2004), low levels of heterozygosity was detected. These results demonstrate that in pea, a self-pollinating and highly homozygous plant, the danger of the loss of genetic integrity exists. These findings are significant for long-term ex situ germplasm management.

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