Isozymic estimation of the biodiversity of Spanish Avena sativa L. landraces stored in a germplasm bank
González-Andrés, F. , Pita, J.M., Malmierca, S., De La Cuadra, C. Isozymic estimation of the biodiversity of Spanish Avena sativa L. landraces stored in a germplasm bank. Israel Journal of Plant Sciences, 53 (2), pp. 135-145
González-Andrés, F. , Pita, J.M., Malmierca, S., De La
Cuadra, C. Isozymic estimation of the biodiversity of Spanish Avena
sativa L. landraces stored in a germplasm bank. Israel Journal of
Plant Sciences, 53 (2), pp. 135-145
Abstract- Twenty-six accessions from the Spanish national germplasm
bank of oats at the Plant Genetic Resources Centre (CRF-INIA)
collection of Avena sativa L. were analyzed by isozyme. These
accessions were a subset of the core collection and were selected
on the basis of their positive agricultural characteristics. The
sites where the 26 accessions to the collection were gathered were
representative of the relative weightings, both in the core and in
the entire collection, of the various agroclimatic regions of
Spain. The objectives of the study were: (i) to ascertain the
degree of isozymic variability between and within accessions; (ii)
to compare the results with the variability recorded in a prior
isozyme study with a larger, random, sample of the entire
collection in order to validate the criteria used for the selection
of the 26 accessions; and (iii) to define groupings of accessions
on the basis of their genetic distances, this being a piece of
information of value for the utilization of germplasm. Each of the
accessions had its own distinctive array of isozyme phenotypes.
High overall diversity was detected (phenotypic variability index
Pj = 0.576). Almost one-third (29%) of the overall variability was
intra-accession variability. There were large differences in
intra-accession variability, and accessions were divided into 3
groups on the basis of their internal diversity, estimated from Pj,
and the Shannon index, Hj. The isozymic variation in the 26
accessions was similar to that of the entire collection, which
indicates that the method used to select the subset did not cause
any loss of genetic diversity. The PCA defined 3 clusters of
accessions with a few outliers. The grouping showed only a limited
link to the geographical origin of the accessions, but had a
noteworthy relationship with the agroclimatic conditions at the
collection sites.



