Forests (Feb 2022)

Kinship Analysis and Pedigree Reconstruction of a Natural Regenerated Cork Oak (<i>Quercus suber</i>) Population

  • Bruna Mendes,
  • Teresa Sampaio,
  • Marta A. Antunes,
  • Hugo Magalhães,
  • Filipe Costa e Silva,
  • Carla Borges,
  • Fernanda Simões,
  • Ana Usié,
  • Maria Helena Almeida,
  • António Marcos Ramos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f13020226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 226

Abstract

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Cork oak (Quercus suber L.) is a valuable forest species in the western Mediterranean Basin due to its ecological value and the production of cork (a renewable natural material). Cork quality depends on the genetic background and cork oak environment, which has long been recognized. As no cork oak genetic trials with pedigree information were available, the inference of the genetic relatedness between individuals from molecular markers can potentially be applied to natural populations. This work aimed to investigate the potential of performing kinship prediction and pedigree reconstruction by SNP genotyping a natural cork oak population. A total of 494 trees located in Portugal were genotyped with 8K SNPs. The raw SNP set was filtered differently, producing four SNP sets that were further filtered by missing data, genotype frequency, and minor allele frequency. For each set, an identity by descent (IBD) matrix was generated to perform the relationship prediction, revealing from 22,114 to 23,859 relationships. Familial categories from the first to the third degree were able to be assigned. The feasibility of SNP genotyping for future studies on the kinship analysis and pedigree reconstruction of cork oak populations was demonstrated. The information produced may be used in further breeding and conservation programs for cork oak.

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