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Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia

Olive is one of the oldest cultivated species in the Mediterranean Basin, including Tunisia, where it has a wide diversity, with more than 200 cultivars, of both wild and feral forms. Many minor cultivars are still present in marginal areas of Tunisia, where they are maintained by farmers in small l...

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Autores principales: Saddoud Debbabi, Olfa, Miazzi, Monica Marilena, Elloumi, Olfa, Fendri, Mahdi Fendri, Ben Amar, Fathi, Savoia, Michele, Sion, Sara, Souabni, Hana, Mnasri, Sameh Rahmani, Ben Abdelaali, Selma, Jendoubi, Fadwa, Mangini, Giacomo, Famiani, Franco, Taranto, Francesca, Montemurro, Cinzia, Msallem, Monji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7154912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32244853
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9030382
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author Saddoud Debbabi, Olfa
Miazzi, Monica Marilena
Elloumi, Olfa
Fendri, Mahdi Fendri
Ben Amar, Fathi
Savoia, Michele
Sion, Sara
Souabni, Hana
Mnasri, Sameh Rahmani
Ben Abdelaali, Selma
Jendoubi, Fadwa
Mangini, Giacomo
Famiani, Franco
Taranto, Francesca
Montemurro, Cinzia
Msallem, Monji
author_facet Saddoud Debbabi, Olfa
Miazzi, Monica Marilena
Elloumi, Olfa
Fendri, Mahdi Fendri
Ben Amar, Fathi
Savoia, Michele
Sion, Sara
Souabni, Hana
Mnasri, Sameh Rahmani
Ben Abdelaali, Selma
Jendoubi, Fadwa
Mangini, Giacomo
Famiani, Franco
Taranto, Francesca
Montemurro, Cinzia
Msallem, Monji
author_sort Saddoud Debbabi, Olfa
collection PubMed
description Olive is one of the oldest cultivated species in the Mediterranean Basin, including Tunisia, where it has a wide diversity, with more than 200 cultivars, of both wild and feral forms. Many minor cultivars are still present in marginal areas of Tunisia, where they are maintained by farmers in small local groves, but they are poorly characterized and evaluated. In order to recover this neglected germplasm, surveys were conducted in different areas, and 31 genotypes were collected, molecularly characterized with 12 nuclear microsatellite (simple sequence repeat (SSR)) markers, and compared with 26 reference cultivars present in the Tunisian National Olive collection. The analysis revealed an overall high genetic diversity of this olive’s germplasm, but also discovered the presence of synonymies and homonymies among the commercialized varieties. The structure analysis showed the presence of different gene pools in the analyzed germplasm. In particular, the marginal germplasm from Ras Jbal and Azmour is characterized by gene pools not present in commercial (Nurseries) varieties, pointing out the very narrow genetic base of the commercialized olive material in Tunisia, and the need to broaden it to avoid the risk of genetic erosion of this species in this country.
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spelling pubmed-71549122020-04-21 Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia Saddoud Debbabi, Olfa Miazzi, Monica Marilena Elloumi, Olfa Fendri, Mahdi Fendri Ben Amar, Fathi Savoia, Michele Sion, Sara Souabni, Hana Mnasri, Sameh Rahmani Ben Abdelaali, Selma Jendoubi, Fadwa Mangini, Giacomo Famiani, Franco Taranto, Francesca Montemurro, Cinzia Msallem, Monji Plants (Basel) Article Olive is one of the oldest cultivated species in the Mediterranean Basin, including Tunisia, where it has a wide diversity, with more than 200 cultivars, of both wild and feral forms. Many minor cultivars are still present in marginal areas of Tunisia, where they are maintained by farmers in small local groves, but they are poorly characterized and evaluated. In order to recover this neglected germplasm, surveys were conducted in different areas, and 31 genotypes were collected, molecularly characterized with 12 nuclear microsatellite (simple sequence repeat (SSR)) markers, and compared with 26 reference cultivars present in the Tunisian National Olive collection. The analysis revealed an overall high genetic diversity of this olive’s germplasm, but also discovered the presence of synonymies and homonymies among the commercialized varieties. The structure analysis showed the presence of different gene pools in the analyzed germplasm. In particular, the marginal germplasm from Ras Jbal and Azmour is characterized by gene pools not present in commercial (Nurseries) varieties, pointing out the very narrow genetic base of the commercialized olive material in Tunisia, and the need to broaden it to avoid the risk of genetic erosion of this species in this country. MDPI 2020-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC7154912/ /pubmed/32244853 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9030382 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Saddoud Debbabi, Olfa
Miazzi, Monica Marilena
Elloumi, Olfa
Fendri, Mahdi Fendri
Ben Amar, Fathi
Savoia, Michele
Sion, Sara
Souabni, Hana
Mnasri, Sameh Rahmani
Ben Abdelaali, Selma
Jendoubi, Fadwa
Mangini, Giacomo
Famiani, Franco
Taranto, Francesca
Montemurro, Cinzia
Msallem, Monji
Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia
title Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia
title_full Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia
title_fullStr Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia
title_full_unstemmed Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia
title_short Recovery, Assessment, and Molecular Characterization of Minor Olive Genotypes in Tunisia
title_sort recovery, assessment, and molecular characterization of minor olive genotypes in tunisia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7154912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32244853
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants9030382
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