Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane

Abstract Background Continual application of herbicides for flaxleaf fleabane control readily results in the evolution of herbicide resistance. Flaxleaf fleabane has evolved resistance to different modes of action herbicides in many countries. Due to the comprehensive geographical distribution of fl...

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Main Authors: Mohammed Hussein Minati, Christopher Preston, Jenna Malone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-02-01
Series:Bulletin of the National Research Centre
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-020-0277-5
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spelling doaj-76685ac853da4057b3d1ea1acd6f5a732021-02-14T12:03:16ZengSpringerOpenBulletin of the National Research Centre2522-83072020-02-0144111110.1186/s42269-020-0277-5Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabaneMohammed Hussein Minati0Christopher Preston1Jenna Malone2School of Agriculture, Food & Wine, Faculty of Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Waite CampusSchool of Agriculture, Food & Wine, Faculty of Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Waite CampusSchool of Agriculture, Food & Wine, Faculty of Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Waite CampusAbstract Background Continual application of herbicides for flaxleaf fleabane control readily results in the evolution of herbicide resistance. Flaxleaf fleabane has evolved resistance to different modes of action herbicides in many countries. Due to the comprehensive geographical distribution of flaxleaf fleabane in Australia, it was classified as a cosmopolitan weed and it therefore has no specific climatic requirement. Results The high percentage of polymorphisms in the samples of the susceptible population (79.8%, 75%) suggests that susceptible populations of flaxleaf fleabane, even within one site, originated from a number of parents. However, the percentage of polymorphism in the resistant populations (51.5%, 66.8%) suggests that resistant populations of flaxleaf fleabane within one site could have originated from fewer parents. In addition, any site containing resistant and susceptible populations of flaxleaf fleabane may have been populated by a large number of parents, evidenced by the relatively high percentage of polymorphisms detected by amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis (86.5%). Despite the large geographic distances between collection locations, populations from across states clustered in several groups showing a close genetic relationship among these populations over these large distances. These high levels of genetic diversity within and between populations confirmed in the sequencing of enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate above support the results of AFLP studies and gave the author more confidence to report the genetic diversity seen within and between population studies. Conclusion To prevent further resistance spread, flaxleaf fleabane management in infested areas should focus on decreasing seed movement from resistant sites as well as reducing the selection pressure for resistance to glyphosate by adopting alternative management strategies.https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-020-0277-5AFLPFlaxleaf fleabaneGenetic variationHerbicide resistance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed Hussein Minati
Christopher Preston
Jenna Malone
spellingShingle Mohammed Hussein Minati
Christopher Preston
Jenna Malone
Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane
Bulletin of the National Research Centre
AFLP
Flaxleaf fleabane
Genetic variation
Herbicide resistance
author_facet Mohammed Hussein Minati
Christopher Preston
Jenna Malone
author_sort Mohammed Hussein Minati
title Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane
title_short Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane
title_full Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane
title_fullStr Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane
title_full_unstemmed Genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane
title_sort genetic diversity and spread of glyphosate-resistant flaxleaf fleabane
publisher SpringerOpen
series Bulletin of the National Research Centre
issn 2522-8307
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract Background Continual application of herbicides for flaxleaf fleabane control readily results in the evolution of herbicide resistance. Flaxleaf fleabane has evolved resistance to different modes of action herbicides in many countries. Due to the comprehensive geographical distribution of flaxleaf fleabane in Australia, it was classified as a cosmopolitan weed and it therefore has no specific climatic requirement. Results The high percentage of polymorphisms in the samples of the susceptible population (79.8%, 75%) suggests that susceptible populations of flaxleaf fleabane, even within one site, originated from a number of parents. However, the percentage of polymorphism in the resistant populations (51.5%, 66.8%) suggests that resistant populations of flaxleaf fleabane within one site could have originated from fewer parents. In addition, any site containing resistant and susceptible populations of flaxleaf fleabane may have been populated by a large number of parents, evidenced by the relatively high percentage of polymorphisms detected by amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis (86.5%). Despite the large geographic distances between collection locations, populations from across states clustered in several groups showing a close genetic relationship among these populations over these large distances. These high levels of genetic diversity within and between populations confirmed in the sequencing of enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate above support the results of AFLP studies and gave the author more confidence to report the genetic diversity seen within and between population studies. Conclusion To prevent further resistance spread, flaxleaf fleabane management in infested areas should focus on decreasing seed movement from resistant sites as well as reducing the selection pressure for resistance to glyphosate by adopting alternative management strategies.
topic AFLP
Flaxleaf fleabane
Genetic variation
Herbicide resistance
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-020-0277-5
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