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Conservation of allelic multiplicity and genotypic frequency by pooling wild populations of perennial ryegrass
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  • Original Article
  • Published: 01 October 1994

Conservation of allelic multiplicity and genotypic frequency by pooling wild populations of perennial ryegrass

  • Francois Balfourier1,
  • Gilles Charmet1 &
  • Catherine Grand-Ravel1 

Heredity volume 73, pages 386–396 (1994)Cite this article

  • 1584 Accesses

  • 5 Citations

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Abstract

Three experimental breeding populations, created by pooling four to five natural populations of perennial ryegrass, were used to indicate the effect of samphng and pooling on the retention of genetic variation. Conservation of allelic multiplicity and genotypic frequencies was observed using allelic frequencies measured on six isozyme markers. We observed that by bulking four or five natural populations, represented respectively by 25 or 20 plants, in a large polycross design, the allelic and genotypic frequencies of the original mother-plants were conserved. There was no loss of rare alleles (0.01<p<0.10) in the three experimental populations compared with the original natural populations. Only very rare alleles (p<0.01) were reduced in frequency or lost. The value of such a bulking approach is discussed and presented as a possible alternative to the core collection approach to the management and use of genetic resources of perennial ryegrass.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. INRA, Plant Breeding Station, Clermont-Ferrand, 63039, France

    Francois Balfourier, Gilles Charmet & Catherine Grand-Ravel

Authors
  1. Francois Balfourier
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  2. Gilles Charmet
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  3. Catherine Grand-Ravel
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Balfourier, F., Charmet, G. & Grand-Ravel, C. Conservation of allelic multiplicity and genotypic frequency by pooling wild populations of perennial ryegrass. Heredity 73, 386–396 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.1994.186

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  • Received: 14 February 1994

  • Issue date: 01 October 1994

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.1994.186

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Keywords

  • allelic frequency
  • core collection
  • gene conservation
  • isozyme markers
  • Lolium perenne
  • population structure
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