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Identification of mango (Mangifera indica L.) landraces from Eastern and Central Kenya using a morphological and molecular approach

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TLDR
The first comprehensive morphological and molecular characterisation of local mango landraces from Eastern and Central Kenya is presented, which can form the basis for urgently needed future conservation efforts, including circa situ conservation on farms and the development of ‘conservation through use’ strategies for local mangoLandraces in Kenya.
Abstract
Local mangos (Mangifera indica L.) are highly valued for home consumption in rural Kenya and are regarded by the local population to be comparatively drought tolerant and less susceptible to pests and diseases than the improved varieties. These are characteristics which make them interesting for improvement and breeding purposes. To date, research on Kenyan mangos has mainly focused on introduced and commercial varieties, whereas information on local varieties and landraces is lacking. We present the first comprehensive morphological and molecular characterisation of local mango landraces from Eastern and Central Kenya. Thirty-eight local mango trees were sampled and characterized by 75 selected qualitative (44) and quantitative (31) morphological descriptors selected from the descriptor list developed for mango by Bioversity International (former IPGRI). Hierarchical cluster analysis was performed using first all variables and finally only 10 selected key descriptors. Additionally, dried mango leaves from the same 38 trees were used for molecular classification with 19 simple sequence repeat markers. Genetic relatedness between the mango samples was visualized using a dendrogram based on Nei’s genetic distance and Neighbor Joining methods. Morphological characterisation resulted in six distinct clusters, and molecular analysis in eight clusters, which partly supported the morphological classification. Four of the eight molecular clusters were consistent and molecular results confirmed morphological classification in these cases. Identification of local mango landraces using morphological traits can be considered as satisfying under field conditions, e.g. for rootstock identification in nurseries, but environmental conditions may influence the results. Molecular marker analysis is more expensive, but independent from environmental influences and thus suitable for identification of landraces in field genebanks and for breeding purposes. Outcomes of the present study can form the basis for urgently needed future conservation efforts, including circa situ conservation on farms and the development of ‘conservation through use’ strategies for local mango landraces in Kenya.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Population genomic analysis of mango (Mangifera indica) suggests a complex history of domestication

TL;DR: The results suggest that mango has a more complex history of domestication than previously supposed, perhaps including multiple domestication events, hybridization and regional selection and it is shown that mango populations in introduced regions have elevated levels of diversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological and molecular characterization and evaluation of mango germplasm: An overview

TL;DR: An attempt has been made to review all possible available literature comprehensively to provide essential details for identification of mango cultivars, characterization of desired traits or genes and evaluation of valuable germplasm with morphological as well as molecular markers.
MonographDOI

Tropical Fruit Tree Diversity : Good practices for in situ and on-farm conservation

TL;DR: Kehlenbeck et al. as discussed by the authors presented an assessment of the resilience provided by trees in the drylands of Eastern Africa, ICRAF, Nairobi; http://www.worldagroforestry.org/ knowfordocs/Treesilience_book_2014.pdf
Journal ArticleDOI

Variability of on-farm food plant diversity and its contribution to food security: a case study of smallholder farming households in Western Kenya

TL;DR: In this article, a case study was conducted to assess food plant and livestock diversity and to identify the biophysical and socioeconomic factors influencing food plant diversity in 30 smallholder farms in Western Kenya.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological characterization of mango ( Mangifera indica L.) cultivars from south-west Nigeria

TL;DR: This study provides a solid baseline for the further characterization of the different mango cultivars in Nigeria, and will be useful for germplasm management and crop breeding.
References
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Journal Article

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R Core Team
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Journal ArticleDOI

genalex 6: genetic analysis in Excel. Population genetic software for teaching and research

TL;DR: Genalex is a user-friendly cross-platform package that runs within Microsoft Excel, enabling population genetic analyses of codominant, haploid and binary data.
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