Abstract

White Guinea yam is mostly a dioecious outcrossing crop with male and female flowers produced on distinct plants. Fertile parents produce high fruit set in an open pollination polycross block, which is a cost-effective and convenient way of generating variability in yam breeding. However, the pollen parent of progeny from polycross mating is usually unknown. This study aimed to determine paternity in white Guinea yam half-sib progenies from polycross mating design. A total of 394 half-sib progenies from random open pollination involving nine female and three male parents was genotyped with 6602 SNP markers from DArTSeq platform to recover full pedigree. A higher proportion of expected heterozygosity, allelic richness, and evenness were observed in the half-sib progenies. A complete pedigree was established for all progenies from two families (TDr1685 and TDr1688) with 100% accuracy, while in the remaining families, paternity was assigned successfully only for 56 to 98% of the progenies. Our results indicated unequal paternal contribution under natural open pollination in yam, suggesting unequal pollen migrations or gene flow among the crossing parents. A total of 3.8% of progenies lacking paternal identity due to foreign pollen contamination outside the polycross block was observed. This study established the efficient determination of parental reconstruction and allelic contributions in the white Guinea yam half-sib progenies generated from open pollination polycross using SNP markers. Findings are useful for parental reconstruction, accurate dissection of the genetic effects, and selection in white Guinea yam breeding program utilizing polycross mating design.

Highlights

  • Yam belong to the genus Dioscorea of the family Dioscoreaceae, order Dioscoreales

  • Thumb and D. japonica Thunb belong to Enantiophyllum and are distinguished by clockwise twining on support [2]

  • The objective of this study was to assess the potential of parentage analysis in determining paternity in the white Guinea yam half-sib progenies generated from open pollination polycross blocks

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Summary

Introduction

Yam belong to the genus Dioscorea of the family Dioscoreaceae, order Dioscoreales. Dioscorea is the largest genus of Dioscoreaceae comprising about 614 species [1]. Yam species are categorized into different sections. The five most important sections are Enantiophyllum, Lasiophyton, Combilium, Opsophyton and Macrogynodium [2]. Dioscorea rotundata Poir, D. alata L., D. cayenensis Lam, D. opposite. White Guinea yam (Dioscorea rotundata Poir) is native to West Africa [3]. White Guinea yam possesses an allotetraploid structure with disomic inheritance [4,5]. Allotetraploids originate from the merging of two species’ genomes of two sets of homologous chromosomes, with each chromosome pairing only with its homologous form during meiosis [6] to form bivalents [7] and disomic inheritance

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