Genetic variation of Castanea sativa Mill

    Student thesis: Doctor of Philosophy

    Abstract

    European chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill.) originated in Eastern Europe and is now
    valued for its timber and edible nuts throughout Europe. This study aims to assess
    genetic variation in natural and managed populations of C. sativa in mainland Europe
    and the UK.
    Six microsatellite-enriched libraries for C. saliva were successfully developed. Twentytwo
    sets of microsatellite-flanking primers were designed of which five were optimised
    and tested on 34 C. sativa samples. The number of alleles varied from three (EMCs42)
    to 14 (EMCs38) per locus.
    Six microsatellite loci primers (EMCs4, EMCs15, EMCs25 and EMCs38 (Buck et al.
    2003) and CsCAT4 and CsCAT6 (Marinoni et al. 2003)) were selected, from those
    available, to screen six English and 21 populations from Spain, France, Italy and
    Greece. Sixty-six alleles were identified in English populations and 77 alleles in the
    mainland European populations. Significant homozygosity was observed at the
    EMCs25 locus, likely due to null alleles present at this locus. Data from this locus were
    consequently removed from the statistical analysis. Estimates of FsT (0) were 0.019 for
    the English populations, and 0.197, 0.170 and 0.3 72 for the mainland European natural,
    coppice and orchard populations, respectively. There were significant differences
    between mainland European orchard and natural (p:S0.05), and orchard and coppice
    (p:S0.05) populations for allelic richness and estimates of FsT- No significant
    differences were found between coppice and natural populations. No significant
    correlation between pair-wise FsT and geographic distance in the English populations
    was found. A significant correlation was found between pair-wise estimate of FsT and
    geographic distance for the mainland European populations (R2=0.0621 , p:S0.005). It is
    likely that the English populations originated from French material, with independent
    imports from Spain and Italy. The relatively high diversity in the English populations
    may be due to multiple imports from different regions in Europe to England.
    Date of AwardMar 2006
    Original languageEnglish
    Awarding Institution
    • University of Wales, Bangor
    SponsorsEuropean Union
    SupervisorChristine Cahalan (Supervisor)

    Cite this

    '