Genetic Diversity of Seven Deciduous Azalea Species (Rhododendron spp. section Pentanthera) Native to the Eastern United States

Author:

Chappell Matthew,Robacker Carol,Jenkins Tracie M.

Abstract

Despite the ecologic and economic importance of native deciduous azaleas (Rhododendron L. section Pentanthera G. Don), our understanding of interspecific variation of North American deciduous azalea species comes principally from morphologic studies. Furthermore, little is known concerning intraspecific or interpopulation genetic variation. With ever-increasing loss and fragmentation of native azalea habitat in the eastern United States due to anthropogenic activity, it is imperative that an understanding of natural genetic variation among and within species and populations is acquired. The present study addresses questions of genetic diversity through the use of amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis. Twenty-five populations of seven species of native azalea were analyzed using three primer pairs that amplified a total of 417 bands. Based on analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) and estimates of Nei's coefficients of gene diversity (H S, H T, and G ST), the majority of variation found in deciduous azalea occurs within populations. Variation both among species and among population was low, likely the effect of common ancestry as well as frequent introgression among members (and populations) of section Pentanthera. The latter was evident in four populations of R. prunifolium (Small) Millais and R. canescens (Michaux) Sweet that were highly related to R. austrinum (Small) Rehder and R. viscosum (L.) Torrey, respectively. Despite these outliers, most populations were grouped into species based on Nei's unbiased genetic distances viewed as an unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) phenogram. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to breeding in section Pentanthera.

Publisher

American Society for Horticultural Science

Subject

Horticulture,Genetics

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