Abstract
Jack (Artocarpus heterophyllus Lam.) is a medium-sized evergreen fruit tree. Its genetic improvement compromised due to limited understanding of available germplasm diversity. To address the gap, we report morphology (50 traits) and genic-SSRs (27)-based characterization of a germplasm collection of 110 accessions of Jack naturalized across diverse habitats in Eastern India and conserved in Field Gene Bank. Before analysis, the entire germplasm collection was divided into five sub-populations based on their naturalization sites. We observed a wide spectrum of diversity for qualitative (26) and quantitative (24) traits in the sub-populations. Principal component analysis using 24 quantitative traits explained 99.73% of the total variation through the first four-axis. Cluster analysis highlighted the dominance of vegetable purpose Jack in the sub-populations. Both morphological and genic-SSR markers revealed significant polymorphism (PIC = 0.12 to 0.46, polymorphism = 100%; PIC = 0.07 to 0.43, polymorphism = 100%) among the accessions. Morphological markers, namely leaf-blade margin, petiole shape, grooves on the petiole, fruit bracteole, and vivipary,exhibited the highest mean resolving power (1.0). Among the genic-SSR markers, JFSSR-4 exhibited the highest mean resolving power of 1.36. Overall, genic-SSR markers revealed higher genetic diversity at the species level (SI = 0.36, He = 0.23, P = 82.71%). Structure analysis using qualitative morphological markers, genic-SSR makers, and a combination of both marker types identified 2, 3 and 2 distinct groups, respectively,with frequent admixtures. The findings convincingly demonstrate that morphological and genic-SSR markers may together effectively explain complex biological diversity, particularly in perennial fruit trees like Jack.
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