Evidence of genetic diversity and taxonomic differentiation among Acacia Senegal populations are varieties in Kenya on randomly amplified polymorphic DNA molecular markers

  • Omondi F Stephen Kenya Forestry Research Institute

Abstract

Acacia senegal is a multipurpose tree species that forms an essential component of many farming systems in Sub-Saharan Africa where it is commercially exploited for gum arabic production. However, the species is yet to be put to optimal production in some countries due to inadequate information on its population genetics and taxonomic delimitation. This study reports the use of 13 randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers to determine genetic diversity and taxonomic relationships among 12 natural populations of A. senegal in Kenya. High genetic diversity was found for all populations. Mean gene diversity (He) for all populations was at 0.288 with effective number of alleles per locus (Ne) of 1.496. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed most genetic variations residing within (60%) rather than among populations. However, significant differentiation was detected among populations (ɸst = 0.130; P < 0.001). Cluster analysis based on similarity coefficient delimited three main groups corresponding to the three putative varieties of A. senegal namely senegal, kerensis and leiorhachis. The RAPD technology suggested high genetic

Published
2021-03-28
How to Cite
Stephen, O. (2021). Evidence of genetic diversity and taxonomic differentiation among Acacia Senegal populations are varieties in Kenya on randomly amplified polymorphic DNA molecular markers. East African Agricultural and Forestry Journal, 84(1). Retrieved from https://www.kalro.org/www.eaafj.or.ke/index.php/path/article/view/324