Assessment of phylogenetic lineage of landraces (AA) and wild Musa acuminata Colla. through morphotaxonomic traits and microsatellite markers

Published

2013-12-31

Keywords:

Musa acuminata Colla., microsatellite markers, phylogeny, morphotaxonomy, molecular characterization
Dimensions Badge

Authors

  • P. Durai National Research Centre for Banana, Thayanur Post, Trichy 620 102, Tamil Nadu
  • S. Uma National Research Centre for Banana, Thayanur Post, Trichy 620 102, Tamil Nadu
  • M.S. Saraswathi National Research Centre for Banana, Thayanur Post, Trichy 620 102, Tamil Nadu
  • N. Jayabalan Bharathidasan University, Trichy
  • M.M. Mustaffa National Research Centre for Banana, Thayanur Post, Trichy 620 102, Tamil Nadu

Abstract

Phylogenetic lineage of Musa acuminata Colla. and its landraces was assessed through morphotaxonomic traits and microsatellite markers. Test accessions were morphotaxonomically characterized for 107 traits using Musa descriptor and documented. An average PIC of 0.55 was observed using microsatellite markers and a total of 139 alleles were identified with a mean of 8.1 alleles per primer pair. Matti, a landrace could be a parthenocarpy form of M. acuminata ssp. burmannica or might have originated through natural crosses involving M. acuminata ssp. burmannica as one of its parents. Four wild acuminata forms, viz., Pagalaphad wild, Chengdawt, Lairawk and Meghalaya wild, which have been newly identified, proved their uniqueness. Anaikomban and Pisang Lilin had grouped in the same cluster and have proved their genetic proximity.

How to Cite

Durai, P., Uma, S., Saraswathi, M., Jayabalan, N., & Mustaffa, M. (2013). Assessment of phylogenetic lineage of landraces (AA) and wild Musa acuminata Colla. through morphotaxonomic traits and microsatellite markers. Indian Journal of Horticulture, 70(04), 463–468. Retrieved from https://journal.iahs.org.in/index.php/ijh/article/view/2054

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)