Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1117445
Título: Genetic diversity of Brazil nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa Bonpl.) in southern Brazilian Amazon.
Autoria: BALDONI, A. B.
TEODORO, L. P. R.
TEODORO, P. E.
TONINI, H.
TARDIN, F. D.
BOTIN, A. A.
HOOGERHEIDE, E. S. S.
BOTELHO, S. de C. C.
LULU, J.
FARIAS NETO, A. L. de
AZEVEDO, V. C. R.
Afiliação: AISY BOTEGA BALDONI TARDIN, CPAMT; LARISSA PEREIRA RIBEIRO TEODORO, UFMS, Chapadão do Sul-MS; PAULO EDUARDO TEODORO, UFMS, Chapadão do Sul-MS; HELIO TONINI, CPPSUL; FLAVIO DESSAUNE TARDIN, CNPMS; ANDREIA ALVES BOTIN, UFMT, Sinop-MT; EULALIA SOLER SOBREIRA HOOGERHEIDE, CPAMT; SILVIA DE CARVALHO CAMPOS BOTELHO, CPAMT; JORGE LULU, CPAMT; AUSTECLINIO LOPES DE FARIAS NETO, CPAMT; VANIA CRISTINA RENNO AZEVEDO, Cenargen.
Ano de publicação: 2020
Referência: Forest ecology and management, v. 458, 117795, 2020.
Conteúdo: Understanding genetic diversity is the basis of the evolutionary process of any species, as there are mechanisms that increase or reduce genetic variation. Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa Bonpl.) occurs in the Amazon region, and is included in the list of endangered species, justifying the importance of this study for the species. This study hypothesized that genetic diversity among individuals collected at different locations in the Amazon (between groups) is greater than genetic diversity between individuals from the same location (within groups). We aimed to study the genetic diversity of four populations of B. excelsa, located in native forests in the Amazon region of the state of Mato Grosso. DNAs were collected from 50 adult trees at each four sites, which were evaluated by seven microsatellite molecular markers (loci Bex06, Bet15, Bet14, Bex09 and Bet16). Genetic diversity of four Brazil nut tree populations collected in the Amazon region were assessed by microsatellite molecular markers. Brazil nut tree revealed to have greater genetic diversity between population than within in individuals in each population, suggesting that seed collection considering a larger number of matrices between a population than within populations is a more effective strategy. The most genetically distant populations were Itaúba and Juína, and Itaúba and Cotriguaçu, showing a relationship with geographical distance and also with differences found in fruit and seed characteristics already reported in other studies evaluating such populations. The findings of this study contribute to the establishment of the species breeding strategies that, in turn, ensure the maintenance and preservation of the genetic diversity of Brazil nut tree in southern Brazilian Amazon.
Thesagro: Castanha
Castanha do Para
Bertholletia Excelsa
NAL Thesaurus: Conservation programs
Breeding
Genetic distance
Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117795
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CPAMT)

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