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Variation of morphological and adaptive traits in subterranean clover populations from Sardinia (Italy)

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Abstract

Variation was studied in subterranean clover for two morphological and four adaptive characters on genetically complex populations from Sardinia. The aim was to assess the population genetic structure in this almost completely inbred species, and to verify whether or not similar levels of diversity occurred at distinct sites of origin. Differences were found among populations for the class frequencies of the two morphological characters and for the subsequent level of intrinsic diversity measured by the Shannon-Weaver index. The variation among and within populations found for the other four characters suggested thatpopulations adjust in the long term their adaptive features to the environmental conditions but maintain contextually high levels of intra-population variation, which, in turn, is a primary factor of adaptation in environments that are seldom uniformspatially and temporally. A principal component analysis executed on the important traits for adaptation showed that these features could be combined, on the average, in different ways in the genetically complex populations here examined. Similarities or differences among populations were not necessarily related to geographic distances ofthe respective collection sites.

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Pecetti, L., Piano, E. Variation of morphological and adaptive traits in subterranean clover populations from Sardinia (Italy). Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution 49, 189–197 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1014795116603

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