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Genetic Analysis of Egyptian Date (<Emphasis Type="Italic">Phoenix dactylifera</Emphasis> L.) Accessions Using AFLP Markers
Authors:Ashraf?M?El-Assar  Robert?R?Krueger  Pachanoor?S?Devanand  Email author" target="_blank">Chih-Cheng?T?ChaoEmail author
Institution:(1) Tropical Fruit and Date Palm Research Department, Horticultural Research Institute, 9 Cairo University Street, Orman, Giza, Egypt;(2) National Clonal Germplasm Repository for Citrus and Dates, USDA-ARS, 1060 Martin Luther King Boulevard, 92507 Riverside, CA , USA;(3) Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California-Riverside, 92521 Riverside, CA, USA
Abstract:Forty-seven samples of date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) collected from eight locations in Egypt were studied using four sets of amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers with near infrared fluorescence labeled primers. These samples belonged to 21 named accessions and 9 of unknown pedigrees. A total of 350 bands were scored and 233 (66.6%) were polymorphic. Twenty-seven Egyptian accessions and ‘Medjool’and ‘Deglet Noor’accessions from California could beclassified into the major cluster. This major cluster may represent a major group of date palm germplasm in North Africa. There were four other clusters, each containing one or two accessions. The variety ‘Halawy’and one accession of unknown provenance were most likely from hybridization between two clusters. Six groups of accessions of which had the same names, revealed similar but not identical AFLP profiles suggesting these accessions might derive from seedlings rather thanthrough clonal offshoot propagation.
Keywords:Genetic similarity  Germplasm  Molecular markers  Phoenix dactylifera
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