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Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage

This study aims to understand the genetic diversity of traditional Oceanian starchy bananas in order to propose an efficient conservation strategy for these endangered varieties. SSR and DArT molecular markers are used to characterize a large sample of Pacific accessions, from New Guinea to Tahiti a...

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Autores principales: Kagy, Valérie, Wong, Maurice, Vandenbroucke, Henri, Jenny, Christophe, Dubois, Cécile, Ollivier, Anthony, Cardi, Céline, Mournet, Pierre, Tuia, Valérie, Roux, Nicolas, Doležel, Jaroslav, Perrier, Xavier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4794170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26982801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0151208
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author Kagy, Valérie
Wong, Maurice
Vandenbroucke, Henri
Jenny, Christophe
Dubois, Cécile
Ollivier, Anthony
Cardi, Céline
Mournet, Pierre
Tuia, Valérie
Roux, Nicolas
Doležel, Jaroslav
Perrier, Xavier
author_facet Kagy, Valérie
Wong, Maurice
Vandenbroucke, Henri
Jenny, Christophe
Dubois, Cécile
Ollivier, Anthony
Cardi, Céline
Mournet, Pierre
Tuia, Valérie
Roux, Nicolas
Doležel, Jaroslav
Perrier, Xavier
author_sort Kagy, Valérie
collection PubMed
description This study aims to understand the genetic diversity of traditional Oceanian starchy bananas in order to propose an efficient conservation strategy for these endangered varieties. SSR and DArT molecular markers are used to characterize a large sample of Pacific accessions, from New Guinea to Tahiti and Hawaii. All Pacific starchy bananas are shown of New Guinea origin, by interspecific hybridization between Musa acuminata (AA genome), more precisely its local subspecies M. acuminata ssp. banksii, and M. balbisiana (BB genome) generating triploid AAB Pacific starchy bananas. These AAB genotypes do not form a subgroup sensu stricto and genetic markers differentiate two subgroups across the three morphotypes usually identified: Iholena versus Popoulu and Maoli. The Popoulu/Maoli accessions, even if morphologically diverse throughout the Pacific, cluster in the same genetic subgroup. However, the subgroup is not strictly monophyletic and several close, but different genotypes are linked to the dominant genotype. One of the related genotypes is specific to New Caledonia (NC), with morphotypes close to Maoli, but with some primitive characters. It is concluded that the diffusion of Pacific starchy AAB bananas results from a series of introductions of triploids originating in New Guinea area from several sexual recombination events implying different genotypes of M. acuminata ssp. banksii. This scheme of multiple waves from the New Guinea zone is consistent with the archaeological data for peopling of the Pacific. The present geographic distribution suggests that a greater diversity must have existed in the past. Its erosion finds parallels with the erosion of cultural traditions, inexorably declining in most of the Polynesian or Melanesian Islands. Symmetrically, diversity hot spots appear linked to the local persistence of traditions: Maoli in New Caledonian Kanak traditions or Iholena in a few Polynesian islands. These results will contribute to optimizing the conservation strategy for the ex-situ Pacific Banana Collection supported collectively by the Pacific countries.
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spelling pubmed-47941702016-03-23 Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage Kagy, Valérie Wong, Maurice Vandenbroucke, Henri Jenny, Christophe Dubois, Cécile Ollivier, Anthony Cardi, Céline Mournet, Pierre Tuia, Valérie Roux, Nicolas Doležel, Jaroslav Perrier, Xavier PLoS One Research Article This study aims to understand the genetic diversity of traditional Oceanian starchy bananas in order to propose an efficient conservation strategy for these endangered varieties. SSR and DArT molecular markers are used to characterize a large sample of Pacific accessions, from New Guinea to Tahiti and Hawaii. All Pacific starchy bananas are shown of New Guinea origin, by interspecific hybridization between Musa acuminata (AA genome), more precisely its local subspecies M. acuminata ssp. banksii, and M. balbisiana (BB genome) generating triploid AAB Pacific starchy bananas. These AAB genotypes do not form a subgroup sensu stricto and genetic markers differentiate two subgroups across the three morphotypes usually identified: Iholena versus Popoulu and Maoli. The Popoulu/Maoli accessions, even if morphologically diverse throughout the Pacific, cluster in the same genetic subgroup. However, the subgroup is not strictly monophyletic and several close, but different genotypes are linked to the dominant genotype. One of the related genotypes is specific to New Caledonia (NC), with morphotypes close to Maoli, but with some primitive characters. It is concluded that the diffusion of Pacific starchy AAB bananas results from a series of introductions of triploids originating in New Guinea area from several sexual recombination events implying different genotypes of M. acuminata ssp. banksii. This scheme of multiple waves from the New Guinea zone is consistent with the archaeological data for peopling of the Pacific. The present geographic distribution suggests that a greater diversity must have existed in the past. Its erosion finds parallels with the erosion of cultural traditions, inexorably declining in most of the Polynesian or Melanesian Islands. Symmetrically, diversity hot spots appear linked to the local persistence of traditions: Maoli in New Caledonian Kanak traditions or Iholena in a few Polynesian islands. These results will contribute to optimizing the conservation strategy for the ex-situ Pacific Banana Collection supported collectively by the Pacific countries. Public Library of Science 2016-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4794170/ /pubmed/26982801 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0151208 Text en © 2016 Kagy et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kagy, Valérie
Wong, Maurice
Vandenbroucke, Henri
Jenny, Christophe
Dubois, Cécile
Ollivier, Anthony
Cardi, Céline
Mournet, Pierre
Tuia, Valérie
Roux, Nicolas
Doležel, Jaroslav
Perrier, Xavier
Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage
title Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage
title_full Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage
title_fullStr Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage
title_full_unstemmed Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage
title_short Traditional Banana Diversity in Oceania: An Endangered Heritage
title_sort traditional banana diversity in oceania: an endangered heritage
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4794170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26982801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0151208
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