Genetic diversity of squash landraces (Cucurbita maxima) collected in Andean Valleys of Argentina

Authors

  • Inés María Lorello Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Cátedra de Botánica Agrícola. Almirante Brown 500 Chacras de Coria. M5528AHB. Mendoza, Argentina.
  • Sandra Claudia García Lampasona Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas. Instituto de Biología Agrícola de Mendoza. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Mendoza, Argentina.
  • Iris Edith Peralta Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias. Cátedra de Botánica Agrícola. Almirante Brown 500 Chacras de Coria. M5528AHB. Mendoza, Argentina.

Keywords:

Microsatellite markers, genetic diversity, germplasm banks, genetic resources, squash landraces, Cucurbita maxima

Abstract

Graphical_abstract_revista_facultad.jpg

Squash landraces (Cucurbita maxima) are maintained by small farmers as a major nutritional food. Twenty seven of these landraces were collected in Argentinian Andean Valleys and morphologically characterized. Genetic diversity was evaluated with microsatellite markers designed for Cucurbita pepo and Cucumis melo and evaluated for the first time in C. maxima. Seven microsatellite primers detected 26 alleles with 3.10 average alleles per locus. The Genetic Diversity reached an average of 0.26; a Polymorphic Information Content (PIC) of 0.20 and 45.5% of polymorphic loci. Higher diversity was found at intra population level. No evidence of lineal correlation between the observed diversity and the geographical distribution of squash landraces was found. Results demonstrate a moderate genetic diversity for all populations, with a wide range of variation in different groups. A subgroup of 10 populations with the highest levels of genetic diversity was considered for maintenance within core collections in the Vegetable Crop Germplasm Bank of Agricultural Research Station (EEA) La Consulta, Mendoza, National Institute of Agricultural Technology (INTA). Anthropogenic and environmental processes, mainly abandonment of cultivated areas and frequent droughts could erode squash landraces diversity. Conservational strategies and new collecting expeditions can be decided based on the genetic diversity found.

Highlights

  • Argentinean squashe's landraces from different Andean environments were characterized for the first time by molecular markers.
  • A technique was developed to generate the amplification products, and to detect useful markers for the conservation of C. maxima genetic resources in germplasm banks.
  • Diversification strategies of food production and seed exchange are deeply rooted in Andean culture, which contributes to the intrapopulation diversity observed.
  • Catamarca and Jujuy were the Provinces with the greatest genetic diversity for cultivated squashes.
  • The great morphological diversity observed would be the result of species adaptation to Andean heterogeneous ecological environments, and anthropic selection.

Downloads

Published

01-06-2020

Issue

Section

Plant protection