Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4514626 Industrial Crops and Products 2012 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) is an important medicinal plant and its dried roots are used in traditional systems of medicine. The market price of roots is determined by physical (textural) quality. Brittle roots with high starch and low fiber are considered to be superior because of ease in grinding. Genetic diversity studies based on root textural parameters have not been done so far. So the present study was designed to assess genetic diversity for morphometric traits and root textural quality parameters among two morphologically distinct groups: Poshita and Nagore. The PCA separated the morphometric and root texture variables distinctly into two different principal components: PC-1 and PC-2 respectively, indicating that both are negatively associated. All the morphotypes in Poshita group showed high positive loadings in PC-1 indicating that component genotypes are high root yielding. Nagore morphotypes were low yielding but the root texture was good. Clustering of morphotypes grouped Poshita and Nagore separately with high inter-cluster distances indicating that both groups are highly divergent from each other, suggesting that there is sufficient scope for varietal improvement through hybridization.

► In this study an attempt has been made for the first time to study genetic divergence based on root textural quality in Withania somnifera. ► The experiment indicated that plant morphology is associated with root yield and root texture, which will facilitate identification for morphological marker traits. ► The study enabled identification of highly divergent morphotypes that can be crossed to derive desirable segregants for high root yield and better root texture.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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