Abstract

Crop landraces are found in many inhabited islands of Greece. Due to the particularity of environment and isolation from the mainland, Greek islands represent a natural laboratory for comparing the diversity of landraces from the islands with those of the Greek mainland. A collection of 36 Greek eggplant landraces and traditional cultivars from the mainland and the islands has been phenotypically and genetically characterized using 22 morphological descriptors and 5 SSR markers. The mineral composition (K, Mg, Cu, Fe, Mn, Zn) of fruits was also determined. The objectives of this study include the multi-level characterization of eggplant local landraces and the comparison of diversity among accessions from the Greek mainland and the islands. Characterization of eggplant landraces will contribute to the enhancement and prevention of genetic erosion in this local group and will provide a resource for future investigation and breeding. PCA analysis of morphological traits explained 45.4% of the total variance revealing the formation of two clusters, one with most of the island accessions, and another with most of the mainland ones. The SSR markers used exhibited high average values for the number of alleles/locus (4.6), expected heterozygosity (0.60) and PIC (0.55), while the observed heterozygosity was low (0.13). Both STRUCTURE and PCoA analyses based on SSR data revealed two genetic clusters, one made up mainly by the mainland accessions, while the other one was mainly made up by the island accessions. Although there was considerable variation among the landraces for the concentration of minerals studied, only average Mg concentration was significantly different between mainland and island accessions. Based on our data, the Greek eggplant landraces present considerable morphological and genetic diversity with some differentiation signatures between the island and the mainland accessions. Our results have implications for conservation of Greek landraces and suggest that Greece might be considered as part of a secondary center of diversity for eggplant in the Mediterranean basin.

Highlights

  • Greece lies at the southernmost part of the Balkan peninsula, at a crossroads between Europe, Asia, and Africa

  • All materials are maintained at the National Greek Gene Bank (GGB; Institute of Genetic Resources and Plant Breeding Thermi, Greece), except I-6, I-7, and I-8, which are conserved at the Department of Agriculture of the University of Patras (Greece)

  • The ranges of variation between accessions from the mainland and islands overlapped, island accessions showed a broader coefficient of variation (CV) for all the quantitative traits, except for NOLFF and LBW

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Summary

Introduction

Greece lies at the southernmost part of the Balkan peninsula, at a crossroads between Europe, Asia, and Africa. Islands are natural laboratories for the study of the evolution and ecology of wild plants and endemisms [2,3,4]. Due to their isolation and special environmental features, islands are considered as sites of special interest to prospect and conserve plant genetic resources [5,6]. 7600 islands and islets in the Aegean Sea (including Crete) and ca. The Aegean Archipelago is one of the largest archipelagos in the world, exhibiting high environmental and topographical heterogeneity, complex geological and palaeogeographical history, as well as high diversity and endemisms, rendering it an ideal stage for biodiversity and biogeographical studies [1,9].

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