Origins of domestication and polyploidy in oca (oxalis tuberosa ; oxalidaceae). 3. aflp data of oca and four wild, tuber-bearing taxa
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Fecha
2009-10-01
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Sociedad Botánica de América
Resumen
Many crops are polyploids, and it can be challenging to untangle the often complicated history of their origins of domestication
and origins of polyploidy. To complement other studies of the origins of polyploidy of the octoploid tuber crop oca ( Oxalis tuberosa
) that used DNA sequence data and phylogenetic methods, we here compared AFLP data for oca with four wild, tuber-bearing
Oxalis taxa found in different regions of the central Andes. Results confi rmed the divergence of two use-categories of cultivated
oca that indigenous farmers use for different purposes, suggesting the possibility that they might have had separate origins of domestication.
Despite previous results with nuclear-encoded, chloroplast-expressed glutamine synthetase suggesting that O. picchensis
might be a progenitor of oca, AFLP data of this species, as well as different populations of wild, tuber-bearing Oxalis
found in Lima Department, Peru, were relatively divergent from O. tuberosa . Results from all analytical methods suggested that
the unnamed wild, tuber-bearing Oxalis found in Bolivia and O. chicligastensis in NW Argentina are the best candidates as the
genome donors for polyploid O. tuberosa , but the results were somewhat equivocal about which of these two taxa is the more
strongly supported as oca ’ s progenitor
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Andean crops, Domestication
Citación
Emshwiller, E., Theim, T., Grau, A., Nina, V. & Terrazas, F. (2009) Origins of domestication and polyploidy in oca (oxalis tuberosa ; oxalidaceae). 3. aflp data of oca and four wild, tuber-bearing taxa. American Journal of Botany, 96(10): 1839-1848. doi: 10.3732/ajb.0800359