Olive is a long-living perennial species with a wide geographical distribution, showing a large genetic and phenotypic variation in its growing area. There is an urgent need to uncover how olive phenotypic traits and plasticity can change regardless of the genetic background. A 2-year study was conducted, based on the analysis of fruit and oil traits of 113 cultivars from 5 germplasm collections established in Mediterranean Basin countries and Argentina. Fruit and oil traits plasticity, broad-sense heritability and genotype by environment interaction were estimated. From variance and heritability analyses, it was shown that fruit fresh weight was under genetic control (64.6%), whereas oleic/(palmitic + linoleic) acids ratio was regulated by the environment (43.9%). Genotype by environment interaction had the major effect on oil content. Among the studied cultivars, different level of stability was observed, which allowed ranking the cultivars based on their plasticity for oil traits. Excessive thermal amplitude, the difference of low and high year values of temperature, negatively affected the oil content and the oleic acid percentage. Information derived from this work will help to direct the selection of cultivars with the highest global fitness averaged over the environments rather than the highest fitness in each environment separately

Plasticity of fruit and oil traits in olive among different environments

Roberto Mariotti;Vitale Stanzione;Marina Bufacchi;Luciana Baldoni;
2019

Abstract

Olive is a long-living perennial species with a wide geographical distribution, showing a large genetic and phenotypic variation in its growing area. There is an urgent need to uncover how olive phenotypic traits and plasticity can change regardless of the genetic background. A 2-year study was conducted, based on the analysis of fruit and oil traits of 113 cultivars from 5 germplasm collections established in Mediterranean Basin countries and Argentina. Fruit and oil traits plasticity, broad-sense heritability and genotype by environment interaction were estimated. From variance and heritability analyses, it was shown that fruit fresh weight was under genetic control (64.6%), whereas oleic/(palmitic + linoleic) acids ratio was regulated by the environment (43.9%). Genotype by environment interaction had the major effect on oil content. Among the studied cultivars, different level of stability was observed, which allowed ranking the cultivars based on their plasticity for oil traits. Excessive thermal amplitude, the difference of low and high year values of temperature, negatively affected the oil content and the oleic acid percentage. Information derived from this work will help to direct the selection of cultivars with the highest global fitness averaged over the environments rather than the highest fitness in each environment separately
2019
Istituto di Bioscienze e Biorisorse
Istituto per i Sistemi Agricoli e Forestali del Mediterraneo - ISAFOM
climate change
fatty acid composition
fruit oil content
fruit traits
genotype by environment interaction
Olea europaea
phenotypic plasticity
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/390876
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