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ID 65300
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Tanaka, Katsunori Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University
Sugiyama, Mitsuhiro Institute of Vegetable and Floriculture Science, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (NARO)
Shigita, Gentaro Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University
Murakami, Ryoma Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University
Duong, Thanh-Thuy Faculty of Agronomy, University of Agriculture and Forestry, Hue University
Aierken, Yasheng Center for Hami Melon, Xinjiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences
Artemyeva, Anna M All-Russian Institute of Plant Genetic Resources on the name of N.I.Vavilov (VIR)
Mamypbelov, Zharas Kazakhstan Research Institute of Potato and Vegetable Growing LLC
Ishikawa, Ryuji Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University
Nishida, Hidetaka Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University ORCID Kaken ID publons researchmap
Kato, Kenji Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University
Abstract
To uncover population structure, phylogenetic relationship, and diversity in melons along the famous Silk Road, a seed size measurement and a phylogenetic analysis using five chloroplast genome markers, 17 RAPD markers and 11 SSR markers were conducted for 87 Kazakh melon accessions with reference accessions. Kazakh melon accessions had large seed with exception of two accessions of weedy melon, Group Agrestis, and consisted of three cytoplasm types, of which Ib-1/-2 and Ib-3 were dominant in Kazakhstan and nearby areas such as northwestern China, Central Asia and Russia. Molecular phylogeny showed that two unique genetic groups, STIa-2 with Ib-1/-2 cytoplasm and STIa-1 with Ib-3 cytoplasm, and one admixed group, STIAD combined with STIa and STIb, were prevalent across all Kazakh melon groups. STIAD melons that phylogenetically overlapped with STIa-1 and STIa-2 melons were frequent in the eastern Silk Road region, including Kazakhstan. Evidently, a small population contributed to melon development and variation in the eastern Silk Road. Conscious preservation of fruit traits specific to Kazakh melon groups is thought to play a role in the conservation of Kazakh melon genetic variation during melon production, where hybrid progenies were generated through open pollination.
Keywords
Central Asia
Cucumis melo
diversity
genetic resources
on-farm conservation
Published Date
2023
Publication Title
Breeding Science
Volume
volume73
Issue
issue2
Publisher
Japanese Society of Breeding
Start Page
219
End Page
229
ISSN
1344-7610
NCID
AA11353132
Content Type
Journal Article
language
English
OAI-PMH Set
岡山大学
Copyright Holders
© 2023 Japanese Society of Breeding.
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publisher
DOI
Web of Science KeyUT
Related Url
isVersionOf https://doi.org/10.1270/jsbbs.22030
License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/