Abstract

Pyrus pyrifolia is considered one of the most important cultivated Pyrus species. Hundreds of landraces and bred cultivars have been developed through the natural and artificial hybridizations necessary due to self-incompatibility. In this study, the genetic diversity of 478 Pyrus accessions, including Chinese landraces, bred cultivars, and wild samples, as well as introduced pear cultivars from Japan and Korea, was investigated with a set of 17 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers distributed across all 17 linkage groups of the pear genome. A total of 121 alleles were detected, including 4 rare alleles with a frequency lower than 5%. Diversity statistics indicated a high level of genetic variation as quantified by the average values of the observed heterozygosity, the expected heterozygosity, and Wright’s fixation index, at 0.76, 0.78, and 0.02, respectively. Population structure and discriminant analysis of principal component analysis implied extensive genetic communication between sand pears in China and revealed four contiguous geographical clusters with overlapping geographical regions. The diversity of the four clusters and approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) indicated that sand pear spread from west to east along the Pearl River and Yangtze River valleys. High diversity and polyphyletic genetic components of cultivars in southwestern China further support southwestern China as the probable center of divergence for Pyrus species. A core collection of 80 out of 470 cultivars was selected, accounting for about 17% of accessions, and capturing 91% of all alleles, including all rare alleles. Our research provides a comprehensive understanding of sand pear germplasm in East Asia and constructs a preliminary core collection, which will be useful for association genetics studies, germplasm conservation, and breeding programs.

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