| Literature DB >> 27077002 |
Eric J Fuchs1, Allan Meneses Martínez2, Amanda Calvo2, Melania Muñoz2, Griselda Arrieta-Espinoza2.
Abstract
Wild crop relatives are an important source of genetic diversity for crop improvement. Diversity estimates are generally lacking for many wild crop relatives. The objective of the present study was to analyze how genetic diversity is distributed within and among populations of the wild rice species Oryza glumaepatula in Costa Rica. We also evaluated the likelihood of gene flow between wild and commercial rice species because the latter is commonly sympatric with wild rice populations. Introgression may change wild species by incorporating alleles from domesticated species, increasing the risk of losing original variation. Specimens from all known O. glumaepatula populations in Costa Rica were analyzed with 444 AFLP markers to characterize genetic diversity and structure. We also compared genetic diversity estimates between O. glumaepatula specimens and O. sativa commercial rice. Our results showed that O. glumaepatula populations in Costa Rica have moderately high levels of genetic diversity, comparable to those found in South American populations. Despite the restricted distribution of this species in Costa Rica, populations are fairly large, reducing the effects of drift on genetic diversity. We found a dismissible but significant structure (θ = 0.02 ± 0.001) among populations. A Bayesian structure analysis suggested that some individuals share a significant proportion of their genomes with O. sativa. These results suggest that gene flow from cultivated O. sativa populations may have occurred in the recent past. These results expose an important biohazard: recurrent hybridization may reduce the genetic diversity of this wild rice species. Introgression may transfer commercial traits into O. glumaepatula, which in turn could alter genetic diversity and increase the likelihood of local extinction. These results have important implications for in situ conservation strategies of the only wild populations of O. glumaepatula in Costa Rica.Entities:
Keywords: AFLP; Biosafety; Crop wild relatives; Gene flow; Genetic resources; Guanacaste; Hybridization; Medio queso
Year: 2016 PMID: 27077002 PMCID: PMC4830232 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Map of sampling sites.
Map of Costa Rica depicting the location of the only two known populations of Oryza glumaepatula. The insets show the location of the three sub-populations along the Medio Queso (MQ) river and Guanacaste (GU) in Costa Rica.
Genetic diversity estimates for Oryza glumaepatula samples from three sub-populations (S1, S2, S3) along the Medio Queso (MQ) river and Guanacaste (GU) in northern Costa Rica.
| Population | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MQ | 68 | 0.178 | 0.1353 | 81.82 |
| S1 | 17 | 0.160 | 0.1280 | 50.3 |
| S2 | 30 | 0.169 | 0.1326 | 64.04 |
| S3 | 21 | 0.175 | 0.1386 | 62.02 |
| GU | 15 | 0.148 | 0.1196 | 47.27 |
N: number of individuals; I, Shannon’s index estimated with GenAlEx; H, Bayesian estimate of expected heterozygosity; %P, polymorphic loci p > 0.05 estimated with AFLPsurv.
Figure 2Neighbour-joining tree.
Neighbor-joining tree showing the relationship between Oryza glumaepatula samples from three sub-populations (S1, S2, S3) along the Medio Queso (MQ) river, Guanacaste (GU) and commercial rice (CO) in Costa Rica.
Figure 3Structure admixture graph for MQ and GU.
(A) Admixture of O. glumaepatula samples from three sub-populations (S1, S2, S3) along the Medio Queso river (MQ) and Guanacaste (GU) in Costa Rica; assigned to two clusters (K = 2) using the Bayesian clustering algorithm in Structure. (B) admixture of O. glumaepatula populations and commercial Oryza sativa (CO) individuals.