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Chilean Tetraploid Cultivated Potato, Solanum tuberosum, is Distinct from the Andean Populations

Microsatellite Data

Celeste M. Rakera and David M. Spooner*,b

a Dep. of Botany, Univ. of Wisconsin, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, WI 53706-1381
b Vegetable Crops Research Unit, USDA-ARS, Dep. of Horticulture, Univ. of Wisconsin, 1575 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706-1590



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Fig. 1. Map showing the 41 generalized areas of the accessions of Solanum tuberosum subsp. andigenum and subsp. tuberosum and ingroups and outgroups used in this study. Numbers are cited as generalized map areas in Table 1 and in Fig. 2.

 


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Fig. 2. Neighbor-joining tree generated from microsatellite data analyzed with Nei's (1972) similarity coefficient. The labels (left to right) are the three-letter taxon code, accession number, and generalized geographic area corresponding to Table 1 and Fig. 1. The vertical lines T and A refer to clusters of subsp. tuberosum and subsp. andigenum, respectively. Asterisks (*) and number signs (#) highlight non-subsp. andigenum cultivated and wild species, respectively, that fall within the subsp. andigenum cluster. The three sets of brackets to the right highlight accessions tbr 72 and tbr 72 rr of replicated runs of the same DNA sample, and accessions adg 42(1) and 43(1), and 34(2) and 35(2), of pairs of the same accessions with DNA extracted from a separate individual grown from a separate seed of the same accession.

 





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