Abstract

The corms and leaves of elephant foot yams (Amorphophallus paeoniifolius (Dennst.) Nicolson) are important foods in the local diet in many Asian regions. The crop has high productivity and wide agroecological adaptation and exhibits suitability for the agroforestry system. Although the plant is assumed to reproduce via panmixia, a comprehensive study on the genetic background across regions to enhance wider consumer palatability is still lacking. Here, ten informative microsatellites were analyzed in 29 populations across regions in India, Indonesia and Thailand to understand the genetic diversity, population structure and distribution to improve breeding and conservation programs. The genetic diversity was high among and within regions. Some populations exhibited excess heterozygosity and bottlenecking. Pairwise FST indicated very high genetic differentiation across regions (FST = 0.274), and the Asian population was unlikely to be panmictic. Phylogenetic tree construction grouped the populations according to country of origin with the exception of the Medan population from Indonesia. The current gene flow was apparent within the regions but was restricted among the regions. The present study revealed that Indonesia and Thailand populations could be alternative centers of the gene pool, together with India. Consequently, regional action should be incorporated in genetic conservation and breeding efforts to develop new varieties with global acceptance.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThe objectives of this study were to elucidate the population structure and its relationship among populations from India, Indonesia and Thailand using microsatellite markers

  • The number of alleles (Na) ranged from 10 to 61, and 267 alleles were generated from 10 loci (Table 1)

  • No commercial variety has been developed in Indonesia and Thailand, but substantial genetic conservation is available at Bogor Agriculture University (Indonesia), the Indonesian Center for Agriculture Biotechnology and Genetic Resources Research and Development (ICABIOGRAD- Indonesia), Bogor Botanical Garden (Indonesia), and Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives (Thailand) and Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation/Royal Forest Department (Thailand)

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Summary

Objectives

The objectives of this study were to elucidate the population structure and its relationship among populations from India, Indonesia and Thailand using microsatellite markers

Methods
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Conclusion
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