Genome wide association study to identify the genetic base of smallholder farmer preferences of Durum wheat traits
Yosef G. Kidane, Chiara Mancini, Dejene K. Mengistu1, Elisabetta Frascaroli, Carlo Fadda , Mario Enrico Pè and Matteo Dell’Acqua1
Smallholder
agriculture involves millions of farmers worldwide. A methodical utilization of
their traditional knowledge in modern breeding efforts may help the production
of locally adapted varieties better addressing their needs. In this study, a
combination of participatory approaches, genomics, and quantitative genetics is
used to trace the genetic basis of smallholder farmer preferences of durum
wheat traits. Two smallholder communities evaluated 400 Ethiopian wheat
varieties, mostly landraces, for traits of local interest in two locations in
the Ethiopian highlands. For each wheat variety, farmers provided quantitative
evaluations of their preference for flowering time, spike morphology, tillering
capacity, and overall quality. Ten agronomic and phenology traits were
simultaneously measured on the same varieties, providing the means to compare
them with farmer traits. The analysis of farmer traits showed that they were
partially influenced by gender and location but were repeatable and heritable,
in some cases more than metric traits. The durum wheat varieties were genotyped
for more than 80,000 SNP markers, and the resulting data was used in a genome
wide association (GWA) study providing the molecular dissection of smallholder
farmers’ choice criteria. We found 124 putative quantitative trait loci (QTL)
controlling farmer traits and 30 putative QTL controlling metric traits. Twenty
of such QTL were jointly identified by farmer and metric traits. QTL derived
from farmer traits were in some cases dependent on gender and location, but
were consistent throughout. The results of the GWA study show that smallholder
farmers’ traditional knowledge can yield QTL eluding metric measurements of
phenotypes. We discuss the potential of including farmer evaluations based on
traditional knowledge in crop breeding, arguing for the utilization of this
untapped resource to develop better adapted genetic materials for local
agriculture.
Keywords: GWAS, folk wisdom, traditional knowledge, small farming,
smallholder farmers, QTL mapping, landraces, Triticum
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