Agronomy (Oct 2021)

Diversity of Purple Rice (<i>Oryza sativa</i> L.) Landraces in Northern Thailand

  • Suksan Fongfon,
  • Tonapha Pusadee,
  • Chanakan Prom-u-thai,
  • Benjavan Rerkasem,
  • Sansanee Jamjod

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11102029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 2029

Abstract

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Purple rice is a functional food with health benefits and industrial potentials. In northern Thailand, purple rice landraces are grown either as wetland or upland rice, in the lowlands and highlands, in small amounts along with the staple rice. This study examined diversity of 37 accessions of purple rice collected from farmers with InDel cytoplasm markers for subspecies differentiation, 16 SSRs markers for within and between accessions variation, and selected grain quality features, namely, anthocyanin, iron, zinc, and gamma oryzanol content, when grown together as wetland rice. Most of the purple rice, originally grown as upland rice in both the lowlands and highlands, were identified as tropical japonica, except the wetland accessions from the lowlands that almost all belonged to the indica group. A high degree of genetic differentiation was found between the upland and wetland ecotypes, but none between those from the lowlands and highlands. A highland origin of the purple upland rice populations in the lowlands, possibly with adaptation to the upland rice cultivation of the tropical japonica, is suggested by the close genetic affinity between the highland and lowland populations of the upland ecotype. Grown in a much smaller area than the staple unpigmented rice, purple rice landraces are also less diverse genetically. Identification of purple rice landrace populations with exceptional anthocyanin and gamma oryzanol contents demonstrates that purple rice landraces can be a source of agronomically useful traits, while being an important cultural heritage, and contributing to the genetic diversity of the local rice germplasm.

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