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Analysis
of genetic diversity in Indian and exotic linseed germplasm and
identification of trait specific superior accessions
V.
Kaur*, S. Kumar, R. Yadav, D.P. Wankhede, J. Aravind, J. Radhamani, J.C. Rana
and A. Kumar
ICAR-National
Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources, Pusa Campus, New Delhi-110 012, India
*Corresponding
Author E-mail: Vikender.Kaur@icar.gov.in
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Key
words
Characterization
Genetic diversity
Linseed germplasm
Promising donors
Publication Data
Paper received :
01.02.2018???????
Revised received :
21.02.2018????
Accepted : 28.02.2018
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Abstract
Aim: Linseed is a
multipurpose crop known for oil, fibre, paper, wax and nutraceuticals. Indian
sub-continent is a center of origin and domestication for this crop and
therefore it is imperative to study the existing genetic diversity among
Indian/exotic germplasm accessions.?
Methodology: Total 191
accessions of linseed germplasm were evaluated in Augmented Block Design with
three check varieties Rashmi, Surabhi, and RLC76 randomized in 7 blocks
consisting of 27 accessions each. Descriptive statistics, Principal component
analysis (PCA) and Ward's agglomerative hierarchical clustering were done
using SAS software. Correlation matrices were generated using R.
Results: Wide range of
phenotypic expression for important agro-morphological traits was observed in
linseed germplasm. PCA identified days to flowering, plant height,
thousand seed weight, seed weight and number per boll, seed yield and seed
size as the most important traits responsible for variation in the germplasm
accessions. Custer analysis grouped the accessions under four major clusters
which indicated fair association of genetic diversity and geographical
diversity. Few trait specific promising accessions such as IC0096539,
IC0096496 (early flowering and maturity), IC0096487, IC0096488 (large boll
size), IC0096490 (high oil content and bold seeds), IC0054949, IC0054954
(bold seeds),EC0718827 (tall, large corolla), and EC0718835 (high seed
yield/plant) were identified with high estimates of heritability for the
mentioned traits. SSR profiling of trait specific accessions was done to
develop unique molecular identity.??? ???
Interpretation: The
inter-relationships between the traits suggested that accessions with short
flowering and maturity duration, low plant height, large bolls and bold seeds
should be given priority in breeding for enhanced yield. Donors for various
traits were identified which may be used in future linseed breeding to target
yield enhancement and diverse geographical adaptation.
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