Strategic use of Iranian bread wheat landrace accessions for genetic improvement: Core set formulation and validation

Iranian wheat landrace accessions (IWAs) were collected from country‐wide farm fields and market places in 1935 by a professor at the University of Tehran and shared with University of California at Davis, California. IWAs were further submitted to the genebank of International Maize and Wheat Impro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plant breeding 2021-02, Vol.140 (1), p.87-99
Hauptverfasser: Vikram, Prashant, Franco, Jorge, Burgueño, Juan, Li, Huihui, Sehgal, Deepmala, Saint‐Pierre, Carolina, Ortiz, Cynthia, Singh, Vaibhav Kumar, Sneller, Clay, Sharma, Achla, Tattaris, Maria, Guzman, Carlos, Pena, Javier, Sansaloni, Carolina Paola, Serna, Jaime Amador Campos, Thiyagarajan, Karthikeyan, Fuentes Davila, Guillermo, Reynolds, Matthew, Sonder, Kai, Govindan, Velu, Ellis, Marc, Bhavani, Sridhar, Jalal Kamali, Mohammad R., Roosatei, Mozaffar, Singh, Sanjay, Basandrai, Daisy, Bains, Navtej Singh, Basandrai, Ashwani, Payne, Thomas, Crossa, José, Singh, Sukhwinder, Igartua, Ernesto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Iranian wheat landrace accessions (IWAs) were collected from country‐wide farm fields and market places in 1935 by a professor at the University of Tehran and shared with University of California at Davis, California. IWAs were further submitted to the genebank of International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), Mexico. 2,403 IWAs from CIMMYT’s genebank were assayed by DArT‐seq technology to assess genetic diversity. No apparent ecogeographic patterns related to genetic diversity were detected, probably due to long‐term transport and frequent interchange of landraces among farmers. A multivariate clustering procedure combining genotypic and phenotypic information was used in selecting a core‐set, which represented 15% of the hexaploid wheat accessions included in this study. This subset captured an estimated 93% of rare (frequency
ISSN:0179-9541
1439-0523
DOI:10.1111/pbr.12885