Genetic characterization of Malawian cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp) landraces: diversity and gene flow among accessions |
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Authors: | K.K. Nkongolo |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, P3E-2C6 |
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Abstract: | Cowpea has been cultured from ancient timesin Africa and Asia and is now widespreadthroughout the tropics and subtropics.Cowpea accessions can be distinguishedphenotypically from one another by theirgrowth habit, time to maturity, yield, andseed size and colour. Data on geneticdiversity of farmer-developed accessionsare lacking. The main objective of thisstudy was to determine the pattern andextend of RAPD marker variation within andamong cowpea populations from differentagroecological zones and to determine thedegree of genetic relationships and geneflow among different landraces used bylocal farmers. Twenty of the 30 RAPDprimers tested allowed amplifications ofrandom polymorphic (RAPD) loci. Overall,80% of the scored loci were polymorphic. The degree of band sharing was used toevaluate genetic distance betweenaccessions and to construct a phylogenetictree. The genetic distance values amongaccessions varied between 0.09 to 0.57.Although some small clusters groupedaccessions of the same growth habits, ageneral lack of agreement betweenclustering and morphological features wasobserved. The analysis of molecularvariance revealed that within-region ortypes (among accessions) variationaccounted for 96% of the total molecularvariance. This high within-accessionvariability is being sustained by anuncontrolled gene flow among populations. |
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Keywords: | gene flow genetic variability RAPD Vigna unguiculata |
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