Abstract

Within the genus Olea, the olive (Olea europaea L.) possesses the largest geographic distribution, and several sub-species have been described. South-west Morocco harbours an endemic olive, O. europaea ssp.maroccana (Greuter & Burdet) P. Vargas et al located in the western part of the High Atlas (mainly on the southern slope of the Ida-ou-Tanane massif) and in the western Anti Atlas. The existence and the taxonomic position of this tree have long remained uncertain, but the combination of several morphological traits is unique. Nuclear and cytoplasmic DNA polymorphism also demonstrate that this tree is a well-differentiated and relictual taxon, probably originating from an ancestral unit within tropical Africa. Our findings refute the opinions of several authors who consider ssp. maroccana to be intermediate between the cultivated olive (O. europaea ssp. europaea) and the Saharan olive (O. europaea ssp. laperrinei (Batt. & Trab.) Cif.). According to cpDNA and mtDNA analysis, the Moroccan olive and the Canarian olive (O. europaea ssp. guanchica P. Vargas et al.) are related and belong to the same sub-taxon. This biogeographical affinity is strongly supported by other recent phylogenetic studies. The long-term viability of ssp.maroccana is threatened by several factors: (1) limited distribution and reduced numbers of individuals within isolated populations, (2) fragmentation processes related to human and livestock pressures, and (3) putative gene flow between this taxon and the cultivated olive. In order to ensure the long-term survival of this endemic olive, a specific program of conservation should be implemented in the near future.

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