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The Israeli Palestinian wheat landraces collection: restoration and characterization of lost genetic diversity | Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture

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The Israeli Palestinian wheat landraces collection: restoration and characterization of lost genetic diversity

Citation:

Frankin, S. ; Kunta, S. ; Abbo, S. ; Sela, H. ; Goldberg, B. Z. ; Bonfil, D. J. ; Levy, A. ; Avivi-Ragolsky, N. ; Nashef, K. ; Roychowdhury, R. ; et al. The Israeli Palestinian Wheat Landraces Collection: Restoration And Characterization Of Lost Genetic Diversity. J Sci Food Agric 2019.

Date Published:

2019 May 29

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: For over a century, genetic diversity of wheat worldwide was eroded by continual selection for high yields and industrial demands. Wheat landraces cultivated in Israel and Palestine demonstrate high genetic diversity and a potentially wide repertoire of adaptive alleles. While most Israeli-Palestinian wheat landraces were lost in the transition to "Green Revolution" semi-dwarf varieties, some germplasm collections made at the beginning of the 20 century survived in genebanks and private collections worldwide. However, fragmentation and poor conservation place this unique genetic resource at a high risk of genetic erosion. Herein we describe a long-term initiative to restore, conserve and characterize a collection of Israeli and Palestinian wheat landraces (IPLR).

RESULTS: (i) a report on the IPLR construction (n=932).; (ii) an historical and agronomic context to this collection; (iii) characterize and assess IPLR's genetic diversity; and (iv) data comparison from two distinct sub-collections within IPLR: a collection made by N. Vavilov in 1926 (IPLR-VIR) and a later one (1979-1981) made by Y. Mattatia (IPLR-M). Though conducted in the same eco-geographic space, these two collections were subjected to considerably different conservation pathways. IPLR-M- which underwent only one propagation cycle- demonstrated marked genetic and phenotypic variability (within and between accessions) in comparison to IPLR-VIR which had been regularly regenerated over ~90 years.

CONCLUSION: We postulate that long-term ex-situ conservation involving human and GxE selection may significantly reduce accession heterogeneity and allelic diversity. Results are further discussed in a broader context of pre-breeding and conservation. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.