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Variation in fertility and its impact on gene diversity in a seedling seed orchard of Eucalyptus tereticornis Mohan Varghese 1, 2, N. Ravi 2, Seog-Gu Son 1, 3 and Dag Lindgren 1 •1 Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umea, Sweden •2. Institute of Forest Genetics and Tree Breeding, Coimbatore, India •3. Korea Forest Research Institute, Cheongryangri, Seoul, Korea Introduction Progeny trials • Serve as breeding populations in short rotation eucalypts • Enables testing of fullsib and half sib families – heritability and breeding values • Thinning and conversion to SSOs Domestication of E. tereticornis • Indian land race – Mysore gum has narrow base, inbred and suffers hybrid breakdown • Breeding populations of natural provenances and local selections • Poor flowering of natural provenances in South India. Study Material • First generation open pollinated progeny trial – 42 families of 17 provenances, 24 trees per family, 4 tree plots, incomplete block design. • Perfect flowers in umbels of 57/cluster. • Outcrossed with protandrous flowers, pollination could occur between flowers of a tree or between related trees. Assessment • Breeding values estimated from combined index values. • Number of primary, secondary and tertiary branches and number of flowers and fruits recorded for each tree • Flowers per tertiary branch and stamens per flower recorded in 10 flowers per tree • Fruits per secondary branch recorded Fertility estimation • Male and female fertility assumed to be equal to number of male and female gametes produced by a tree • Gender fertility assumed to be equal to proportion of reproductive structures of a tree • Total fertility of a tree – average of male and female fertilities. Conversion to SSO • Trees listed according to phenotypic value for tree height. • Hypothetical truncation of 20% best trees (200 trees) to be retained after thinning based on deviation of individual tree value from overall mean Sibling coefficient (A) • Indicates the extent of variation in fertility • Calculated from number of trees in the orchard (N) and fertility of each tree (pi) • A =N Σ pi 2 • Am =N Σ mi 2 • Af =N Σ fi 2 Group coancestry (Θ) • The probability that two genes chosen at random are identical by descent. • Θ = 0.5Σ pi 2 - if the trees are non related and non inbred • Θ =Σ Σ pi pjθij - pi pj – probability that genes originate from genotypes i and j; θij the coancestry between i and j Different sexes of parents • Θ =Σ(mi+fj) Σ (mj+fj) θij probability of maternal and paternal fertility and an interaction component are considered. Status Number (Ns) • The number of unrelated and non inbred genotypes in an ideal panmictic orchard – same coefft. of inbreeding in crop as orchard parents. • Ns = 0.5/ Θ • Ns = 1/Σ pi 2 – if the trees are unrelated – the effective population size • The effective number of trees that contribute to random mating. Variance effective population (v) size (Ne ) • The size of the population that would give same drift in gene frequencies in seed crop as orchard parents. • Ne(v) = A / [2 Θ(A-1)] SSOM(Seeding Seed Orchard Manager) Input constant Realtedness within familiy Expectations of seed orchard 0.125 RUN Number of trees Group coancestry; Q=S(mi+fi)S(mj+fj)qij=Spipjqij Status number;Ns = 0.5 / Q Sibling coefficient; A = C.V.2+1 Variance effective population size; Ne(v)=A/2Q(A-1) Proportion Input measurements B.V. fi mi pi Input I.D Family Predicting relatedness across generations • Θ gamete is a function of inbreeding (F), fertility variation (A) and number (N) of parent trees • Θ offspring= 0.5/Noffspring+(1-0.5/ Noffspring )Θ gamete • Θ gamete =[ 0.5(1+F)A/N ] + (1-A/N)[ NΘ-0.5(1+F) ] / N-1 • Foffspring = Θ gamete Gene diversity (GD) and Heterozygosity (He) • Reference population – natural forest is considered to have infinite number of unrelated individuals. • GD = 1- Θ • Het = [1-(1/2 Ne(v) )] Het-1 Genetic gain • Expected genetic gain is computed based on fertility of orchard parents and breeding value of trees. • ΔG = Σ Gi pi Fertility status • 18% ( 35 trees) of selected trees were fertile • No correlation between tree growth and fertility (r = 0.057) • High correlation between male and female fertility (r = 0.981) • Greater variation in seed output than in pollen production between trees Variation in A Fertility type Selected 70 pollen 35 trees parents Male 15.8 10.2 19.3 19.3 Female 17.4 16.3 Av tree fertility 8.2 6.9 Constant seed collection 1 1 Equal fertility Varying fertility Gen 1 Gen 2 Gen 4 Gen 6 Gen7 Θ 0.059 0.097 0.172 0.240 0.273 Ns 8.532 5.135 2.910 2.080 1.834 GD 0.941 0.903 0.828 0.760 0.727 Constant seed collection Gen 1 Gen 2 Gen 4 Gen 6 Gen7 Θ 0.0294 0.049 0.087 0.124 0.142 Ns 17.007 10.230 5.738 4.031 3.521 GD 0.971 0.951 0.876 0.858 0.913 Extra male parents Gen 1 Gen 2 Gen 4 Gen 6 Gen7 Θ 0.0293 0.068 0.140 0.207 0.239 Ns 17.065 7.365 3.571 2.416 2.096 GD 0.971 0.932 0.860 0.793 0.761 Altering fertility status • Constant seed collection –lowers Θ by 92% in 7th generation and Ne(v) is twice that of existing fertility. Minimum loss in diversity in each generation • Extra pollen parents – 14% reduction in Θ in 7th generation. 4-7% reduction in loss of diversity from existing fertility. Coancestry variation in different fertility conditions 0.3 varying fertility 0.25 0.2 Constant seed collection 0.15 Equal fertility 0.1 Extra pollen parents 0.05 0 Gen 1 Gen 2 Gen 3 Gen 4 Gen 5 Gen 6 Gen 7 Generations Impact of fertility status • Important role as breeding value as it transfers the genes to the seed crop. • Fertility in trees varied from 0-20% (0.005% if trees had same fertility) •12 most fertile trees produced 81% of gametes •A=17.4 results in high genetic erosion (Nr drop from 4.3% to 0.9%) in 7th generation) Emphasis in first generation seed orchard of exotics • Initiates domestication in a new location • Lower the values of A to prevent genetic erosion ( 17.4 > reported value A=9.32) • Enable random of maximum trees of known genetic potential. • Limit equal seed collection to genetically superior mothers and provide adequate male parents to enhance the gene diversity. Fig. 1. Pollen production in Eucalyptus tereticornis seed orchard Helenvale 10% Helenvale Mt Garnet M t Garnet 17% Cardw ell Kupiano Orobay Local 51% C ardwell 2% Kupiano 3% Sogeri Plat Palmer R Ravenshoe Normanby Orobay 9% Sogeri Plat 2% R avenshoe 3% Kennedy R 2% N ormanby 1% Palm er R 0% Kennedy R Local Conclusion • High levels of inbreeding and drift may result if precautions are not taken in a first generation orchard • An SSO is ideal in initiating a breeding / domestication program as seed can be produced for different requirements. • Additional pollen parents can be retained till selected trees contribute seed. • Paclobutrazol can be used to enhance flowering. Paclo application in E.camaldulensis Paclo application in E.tereticornis