Morphological Diversity of Bambara Groundnut [Vigna subterranea (L.) Verdc.] Landraces in Tanzania

A field experiment was conducted in Tanzania for two seasons to assess the genetic diversity of bambara groundnut landraces based on morphological characters. One hundred accessions collected from a wide range of agricultural zones in the country were evaluated in a 10 x 10 triple lattice block desi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genetic resources and crop evolution 2006-03, Vol.53 (2), p.367-378
Hauptverfasser: Ntundu, W.H, Shillah, S.A, Marandu, W.Y.F, Christiansen, J.L
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Shillah, S.A
Marandu, W.Y.F
Christiansen, J.L
description A field experiment was conducted in Tanzania for two seasons to assess the genetic diversity of bambara groundnut landraces based on morphological characters. One hundred accessions collected from a wide range of agricultural zones in the country were evaluated in a 10 x 10 triple lattice block design at Maruku station in Bukoba, Tanzania. For the qualitative characters evaluated, considerable morphological variations were observed for growth habit, pod shape and pod colour. Quantitative morphological characters such as peduncle length, number of leaves per plant, terminal leaflet width, terminal leaflet length, petiole length, plant spread, plant length, pod width, seed length, seed width, number of pods per plant, shelling percentage and days to 50% flowering showed significant variation among accessions for the two test seasons. Multivariate analysis for 15 quantitative morphological traits that showed significant variation indicated that the first four PCs with eigenvalues >or=1 accounted for 63.0 and 65.0% of the total variance among the accessions during the two test seasons, respectively. The most important loadings for PC1 and PC2 for the two seasons were terminal leaflet width, terminal leaflet length, petiole length, plant spread, plant height and pod length, pod width, seed length, seed width, numbers of pods per plant. Cluster analysis grouped bambara groundnut accessions into three major groups with respect to their geographic origins. Based on this present study, bambara groundnut landraces from Tanzania displayed a considerable diversity for morphological and agronomic traits useful for germplasm management and utilization into crop improvement.
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Quantitative morphological characters such as peduncle length, number of leaves per plant, terminal leaflet width, terminal leaflet length, petiole length, plant spread, plant length, pod width, seed length, seed width, number of pods per plant, shelling percentage and days to 50% flowering showed significant variation among accessions for the two test seasons. Multivariate analysis for 15 quantitative morphological traits that showed significant variation indicated that the first four PCs with eigenvalues &gt;or=1 accounted for 63.0 and 65.0% of the total variance among the accessions during the two test seasons, respectively. The most important loadings for PC1 and PC2 for the two seasons were terminal leaflet width, terminal leaflet length, petiole length, plant spread, plant height and pod length, pod width, seed length, seed width, numbers of pods per plant. Cluster analysis grouped bambara groundnut accessions into three major groups with respect to their geographic origins. 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subjects Agricultural management
Agronomy
Bambara groundnut
Cluster analysis
color
Crop improvement
Eigenvalues
field crops
field experimentation
Flowering
Genetic diversity
genetic variation
geographical variation
Germplasm
Groundnuts
growth habit
landraces
Lattice design
leaves
legumes
length
Morphology
Multivariate analysis
petioles
phenology
plant genetic resources
plant morphology
pods
quantitative traits
Seasons
seeds
Vigna subterranea
width
title Morphological Diversity of Bambara Groundnut [Vigna subterranea (L.) Verdc.] Landraces in Tanzania
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