Proceedings of the XLV Italian Society of Agricultural
Genetics - SIGA Annual Congress
Salsomaggiore Terme, Italy - 26/29 September, 2001
ISBN 88-900622-1-5
Poster Abstract
AFLP
ANALYSIS FOR CHARACTERIZATION OF OSTEOSPERMUM GERMPLASM
ARRU L.*,
FRANCIA E.*, BUSCONI M.*, BERIO T.**, MORREALE G.**, GIOVANNINI A.**
* Istituto Sperimentale per la Cerealicoltura, Sezione
di Fiorenzuola, Via San Protaso 302, I-29017 Fiorenzuola d’Arda (PC),
Italy
n.pecchioni@iol.it
** Istituto Sperimentale per la Floricoltura, Sezione
di Propagazione, Corso degli Inglesi 508, I-18038 Sanremo (IM), Italy
genotype
characterisation, Osteospermum, AFLP
The
cultivated genus Osteospermum belongs to the plant family Compositae
(Asteraceae). Their native habitat is in South African
mountains, therefore these plants are also known under the common name 'African
Daisy'. Osteospermums are half hardy or hardy perennial ornamental plants. The
genus Osteospermum contains about seventy different
species, all perennial plants. The perennial cultivated varieties, not to be
confused with the annuals and less valuable cultivated hybrids of Dimorphoteca
aurantiaca, are in turn hybrids of O. ecklonis,
O. jucundum and other species, and hybrid combinations are
often unknown. Also for this hybrid condition they are usually not available
from seed, but as vegetatively propagated clones. New varieties are being bred
continuously because of the increased economic importance in the production of
flowering pot plants and of the increasing demand for accessions with new
bright colours and for novel miniature plants. The genus Osteospermum
already meets these criteria in its native habitat of South African mountains,
and there has been much recent work by botanists and plant breeders to further
enhance the natural characteristics of those seventy species of wild plants.
Indeed, a
characterization of cultivated Osteospermum germplasm becomes necessary in our
country in order to protect the consumers' and breeders' rights, and to help
the national breeders in the choice of the parents for a new cross. Moreover,
the characterisation by means of molecular markers supplies a way to evaluate
biodiversity among commercial varieties and wild relatives. Molecular marker
(RAPD) analysis was already demonstrated to be an useful tool to identify
Osteospermum varieties and to study their genetic affinities (Faccioli et al.,
1999).
AFLP
analysis has been now carried out on a wide collection of 106 Osteospermum
composed by wild species and cultivars belonging to English, Italian and Danish
breeding groups. The AFLP protocol has been set up for this ornamental. All the
accessions were then tested with four AFLP primers combinations, leading to the
undoubtful characterisation of genotypes and to a more accurate understanding
of the relationships between the Osteospermum species and
cultivars.