Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers

We assessed the interplay of artificial and natural selection in rice adaptation in low-input farming systems in West Africa. Using 20 morphological traits and 176 molecular markers, 182 farmer varieties of rice (Oryza spp.) from 6 West African countries were characterized. Principal component analy...

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Main Authors: Mokuwa, A., Nuijten, E., Okry, F., Teeken, Béla, Maat, H., Richards, P., Struik, P.C.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Public Library of Science 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116092
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author Mokuwa, A.
Nuijten, E.
Okry, F.
Teeken, Béla
Maat, H.
Richards, P.
Struik, P.C.
author_browse Maat, H.
Mokuwa, A.
Nuijten, E.
Okry, F.
Richards, P.
Struik, P.C.
Teeken, Béla
author_facet Mokuwa, A.
Nuijten, E.
Okry, F.
Teeken, Béla
Maat, H.
Richards, P.
Struik, P.C.
author_sort Mokuwa, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description We assessed the interplay of artificial and natural selection in rice adaptation in low-input farming systems in West Africa. Using 20 morphological traits and 176 molecular markers, 182 farmer varieties of rice (Oryza spp.) from 6 West African countries were characterized. Principal component analysis showed that the four botanical groups (Oryza sativa ssp. indica, O. sativa ssp. japonica, O. glaberrima, and interspecific farmer hybrids) exhibited different patterns of morphological diversity. Regarding O. glaberrima, morphological and molecular data were in greater conformity than for the other botanical groups. A clear difference in morphological features was observed between O. glaberrima rices from the Togo hills and those from the Upper Guinea Coast, and among O. glaberrima rices from the Upper Guinea Coast. For the other three groups such clear patterns were not observed. We argue that this is because genetic diversity is shaped by different environmental and socio-cultural selection pressures. For O. glaberrima, recent socio-cultural selection pressures seemed to restrict genetic diversity while this was not observed for the other botanical groups. We also show that O. glaberrima still plays an important role in the selection practices of farmers and resulting variety development pathways. This is particularly apparent in the case of interspecific farmer hybrids where a relationship was found between pericarp colour, panicle attitude and genetic diversity. Farmer varieties are the product of long and complex trajectories of selection governed by local human agency. In effect, rice varieties have emerged that are adapted to West African farming conditions through genotype × environment × society interactions. The diversity farmers maintain in their rice varieties is understood to be part of a risk-spreading strategy that also facilitates successful and often serendipitous variety innovations. We advocate, therefore, that farmers and farmer varieties should be more effectively involved in crop development.
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spelling CGSpace1160922025-01-24T14:12:53Z Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers Mokuwa, A. Nuijten, E. Okry, F. Teeken, Béla Maat, H. Richards, P. Struik, P.C. rice research We assessed the interplay of artificial and natural selection in rice adaptation in low-input farming systems in West Africa. Using 20 morphological traits and 176 molecular markers, 182 farmer varieties of rice (Oryza spp.) from 6 West African countries were characterized. Principal component analysis showed that the four botanical groups (Oryza sativa ssp. indica, O. sativa ssp. japonica, O. glaberrima, and interspecific farmer hybrids) exhibited different patterns of morphological diversity. Regarding O. glaberrima, morphological and molecular data were in greater conformity than for the other botanical groups. A clear difference in morphological features was observed between O. glaberrima rices from the Togo hills and those from the Upper Guinea Coast, and among O. glaberrima rices from the Upper Guinea Coast. For the other three groups such clear patterns were not observed. We argue that this is because genetic diversity is shaped by different environmental and socio-cultural selection pressures. For O. glaberrima, recent socio-cultural selection pressures seemed to restrict genetic diversity while this was not observed for the other botanical groups. We also show that O. glaberrima still plays an important role in the selection practices of farmers and resulting variety development pathways. This is particularly apparent in the case of interspecific farmer hybrids where a relationship was found between pericarp colour, panicle attitude and genetic diversity. Farmer varieties are the product of long and complex trajectories of selection governed by local human agency. In effect, rice varieties have emerged that are adapted to West African farming conditions through genotype × environment × society interactions. The diversity farmers maintain in their rice varieties is understood to be part of a risk-spreading strategy that also facilitates successful and often serendipitous variety innovations. We advocate, therefore, that farmers and farmer varieties should be more effectively involved in crop development. 2014-01-20 2021-11-15T15:50:32Z 2021-11-15T15:50:32Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116092 en Open Access Public Library of Science Mokuwa, A. Nuijten, E. Okry, F. Teeken, B. Maat, H. Richards, P. Struik, P.C.Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers.PLOS ONE.2014, Volume 9, Issue 1:e85953.
spellingShingle rice
research
Mokuwa, A.
Nuijten, E.
Okry, F.
Teeken, Béla
Maat, H.
Richards, P.
Struik, P.C.
Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers
title Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers
title_full Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers
title_fullStr Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers
title_full_unstemmed Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers
title_short Processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in West Africa: evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers
title_sort processes underpinning development and maintenance of diversity in rice in west africa evidence from combining morphological and molecular markers
topic rice
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/116092
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