Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions?

The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture houses the largest collection of cowpea landraces in the world. This collection has been studied using agro morphological, botanical and geographic descriptors to define a core collection with a smaller reference collection being defined thereafter...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hearne, Sarah Jane, Franco, J., Magembe, E.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Institute of Tropical Agriculture 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90653
_version_ 1855528679235387392
author Hearne, Sarah Jane
Franco, J.
Magembe, E.
author_browse Franco, J.
Hearne, Sarah Jane
Magembe, E.
author_facet Hearne, Sarah Jane
Franco, J.
Magembe, E.
author_sort Hearne, Sarah Jane
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture houses the largest collection of cowpea landraces in the world. This collection has been studied using agro morphological, botanical and geographic descriptors to define a core collection with a smaller reference collection being defined thereafter using molecular markers. Within any collection of germplasm it is important to understand the level of inbreeding and heterogeneity as these have direct impact on germplasm maintenance strategies and sampling numbers for utilization and study of collections. Cowpea is primarily an autogamous species though outcrossing does occur and rates up to 5% have been recorded in cultivated species. In order to assess the level of inbreeding and heterogeneity within the cowpea collection at IITA we conducted a study sampling 100 landraces and assessing ten plants per landrace, inbreeding levels and diversity were assessed using SSR markers. Analysis of the intra accession variation indicated that inbreeding in the cowpea accessions studied was not as complete as may have previously been assumed. In addition, it was observed that analysis of 5 plants per accession would provide a more precise measure of diversity than the one typically used. However, while increasing the numbers of plants genotyped per accession in would give a more accurate representation of diversity, the contribution of this information to our knowledge would be extremely slight and questionably inefficient.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace90653
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2010
publishDateRange 2010
publishDateSort 2010
publisher International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
publisherStr International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace906532024-01-17T12:58:34Z Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions? Hearne, Sarah Jane Franco, J. Magembe, E. cowpeas inbreeding genetic variation grain legumes forage gene banks The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture houses the largest collection of cowpea landraces in the world. This collection has been studied using agro morphological, botanical and geographic descriptors to define a core collection with a smaller reference collection being defined thereafter using molecular markers. Within any collection of germplasm it is important to understand the level of inbreeding and heterogeneity as these have direct impact on germplasm maintenance strategies and sampling numbers for utilization and study of collections. Cowpea is primarily an autogamous species though outcrossing does occur and rates up to 5% have been recorded in cultivated species. In order to assess the level of inbreeding and heterogeneity within the cowpea collection at IITA we conducted a study sampling 100 landraces and assessing ten plants per landrace, inbreeding levels and diversity were assessed using SSR markers. Analysis of the intra accession variation indicated that inbreeding in the cowpea accessions studied was not as complete as may have previously been assumed. In addition, it was observed that analysis of 5 plants per accession would provide a more precise measure of diversity than the one typically used. However, while increasing the numbers of plants genotyped per accession in would give a more accurate representation of diversity, the contribution of this information to our knowledge would be extremely slight and questionably inefficient. 2010 2018-01-30T11:04:36Z 2018-01-30T11:04:36Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90653 en Limited Access International Institute of Tropical Agriculture Hearne, S., Franco, J. & Magembe, E. (2010). Optimal units of selection–How many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions. In Proceedings of the Fifth World Cowpea Conference on improving livelihoods in the cowpea value chain through advancement in science, held in Saly: Innovative research along the cowpea value chain, (pp. 105-111), 27 Sept. - 1 October, Ibadan, Nigeria.
spellingShingle cowpeas
inbreeding
genetic variation
grain legumes
forage
gene banks
Hearne, Sarah Jane
Franco, J.
Magembe, E.
Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions?
title Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions?
title_full Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions?
title_fullStr Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions?
title_full_unstemmed Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions?
title_short Optimal units of selection – how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions?
title_sort optimal units of selection how many plants are representative of diversity in collections of cowpea landrace accessions
topic cowpeas
inbreeding
genetic variation
grain legumes
forage
gene banks
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90653
work_keys_str_mv AT hearnesarahjane optimalunitsofselectionhowmanyplantsarerepresentativeofdiversityincollectionsofcowpealandraceaccessions
AT francoj optimalunitsofselectionhowmanyplantsarerepresentativeofdiversityincollectionsofcowpealandraceaccessions
AT magembee optimalunitsofselectionhowmanyplantsarerepresentativeofdiversityincollectionsofcowpealandraceaccessions