Abstract

The entire collection of cultivated barley germplasm accessions conserved in the Indian National Genebank (INGB) was characterized for nine qualitative and 8 quantitative traits to assess the nature and magnitude of prevailing genetic variability and to develop a core set. A wide range of variability was observed for days to spike emergence (51–139 days), days to physiological maturity (100–152 days), plant height (45.96–171.32 cm), spike length (3.44–13.73 cm), grain number/spike (10.48–82.35), and 100-grain weight (1.20–6.86 g). Initially, seven independent core sets were derived using 3 core construction tools– MSTRAT, PowerCore, and Core Hunter 3 by employing the maximization method, heuristic sampling, and optimisation of average genetic distances, respectively. The core set-3 generated by Core Hunter 3 by simultaneous optimisation of diversity and representativeness, captured maximum genetic diversity of the whole collection as evident from the desirable genetic distance, variance difference percentage (VD; 87.5%), coincidence rate of range (CR; 94.27%) and variable rate of coefficient of variance (VR; 113.8%), which were more than threshold value of VD (80%), CR (80%), and VR (100%) required for good core collection. The coefficient of variation and Shannon–Weaver diversity indices were increased in the core set as compared with the whole collection. The low value of Kullback-Leibler distance (0.024–0.071) for all traits and quantile-quantile plots revealed a negligible difference between trait distribution patterns among the core set and entire assembly. Correlogram revealed that trait associations and their magnitude were conserved for most of the traits after sampling of the core set. The extraction of the INGB barley core set and identification of promising accessions for agronomically important traits in different genetic backgrounds will pave the way for expedited access to genetically diverse and agronomically important germplasm for barley breeding.

Highlights

  • Barley is one of the main important cereal crops cultivated worldwide in a wide range of environments from temperate to sub-tropical, arid to semi-arid

  • This report summarizes the results on the characterization of 6,778 barley accessions, including 1,427 exotic introductions conserved in the National Genebank of India based on agromorphological and phenological traits

  • Statistical analysis of distribution parameters showed a wide range of phenotypic expression for the traits such as days to 75% spike emergence (DSE), PH, SL, grain number per spike (GNS), hundred-grain weight (HGW), and GY in the barley germplasm

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Summary

Introduction

Barley is one of the main important cereal crops cultivated worldwide in a wide range of environments from temperate to sub-tropical, arid to semi-arid. Koch) Thell, in the Fertile Crescent of Middle East about 10,000 years ago (Harlan and Zohary, 1966; Ceccarelli et al, 1999; Badr et al, 2000) and has different morphological variants based on inflorescence and caryopsis types. They are classified into two distinct morphotypes based on the number of grain rows in a spike viz. In two-rowed barley, only one spikelet at each node is fertile while all three spikelets are fertile in the six-rowed variant Another classification is based on the presence of distinct caryopsis types. Colored caryopses are reported in both hulled and hulless types

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