Artículos de revistas
Wholesale replacement of lima bean (Phaseolus lunatusL.) landraces over the last 30 years in northeastern Campeche, Mexico
Author
JAIME MARTINEZ CASTILLO
Institutions
Abstract
Genetic erosion has been evaluated at the
landrace level in the past, principally because the loss
of landraces is believed to generate erosion at the
allelic level; however, few studies had tested this
hypothesis in the crop’s centers of diversity and
domestication. Using microsatellite markers, we
analyzed for genetic erosion in lima bean (Phaseolus
lunatus) landraces over time in samples collected in
1979 and in 2007 in northeast Campeche, in the
Yucatan peninsula, Mexico, an important diversity
center and part of the putative domestication area for
this crop. We found that the lima bean genetic pool
from 1979 had a higher genetic diversity than the one
for the 2007 pool (Nei’s diversity, H=0.18 and
0.05, respectively). Although this result could not to
be explained using a bottleneck analysis, a cluster
analysis showed that the alleles present in 1979 were
not the same as those found in 2007, indicating an
allelic displacement in the genetic pool of the lima
bean landraces in the last 30 years. This displacement
could be due to the introduction of improved varieties
or landraces, resulting in a displacement of local
varieties or to changes in the Mayan criteria for
selection of germplasm or both. This study showed
that the loss of landraces can generate both quantitative and qualitative changes in the genetic pool of
the domesticated species. Such changes are very
important to consider when planning ex situandin
situ programs to conserve crop diversity in their
domestication areas.