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a Dep. of Plant Biology and Pathology and The Biotechnology Center for Agriculture & the Environment, Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
b USDA-ARS, Beltsville, MD 20705
c Dep. of Plant Biology and Pathology, Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
* Corresponding author (belanger{at}aesop.rutgers.edu).
Interspecific hybridization is a widely used approach to improve crop species. We are pursuing the possibility of using interspecific hybridization between the turfgrass species colonial bentgrass (Agrostis capillaris L.) and creeping bentgrass (A. stolonifera L.) for the improvement of resistance to the fungal disease dollar spot (Sclerotinia homoeocarpa F.T. Bennett) in creeping bentgrass. From a field evaluation of a backcross population, it appears that introgression of dollar spot resistance from colonial bentgrass to creeping bentgrass is possible. We used the backcross population to generate the first genetic linkage map for colonial bentgrass. The map length was 1156 cM and consisted of 212 amplified fragment length polymorphic markers and 110 gene-based markers. Colonial bentgrass is an allotetraploid species (2n = 4x = 28, A1 and A2 subgenomes). The map consisted of the expected 14 linkage groups, which could be assigned to either the A1 or A2 homoeologous subgenomes. Although there were dollar spot resistant individuals in the mapping population, no quantitative trait loci associated with resistance were detected.
Abbreviations: AFLP, amplified fragment length polymorphism EST, expressed sequence tag LOD, log of odds NCBI, National Center for Biotechnology Information PCR, polymerase chain reaction QTL, quantitative trait locus
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