HortScience (Sep 2021)

Discrimination of Salix caprea, Salix gracilistyla, and Their Interspecific Hybrid Using Vegetative Characteristics and Partial Least Squares Discriminant Analysis

  • Han-Na Seo,
  • Hyo-In Lim,
  • Yong-Yul Kim,
  • Seung-Beom Chae,
  • Wonwoo Cho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTSCI16015-21
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 56, no. 10
pp. 1230 – 1238

Abstract

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Identifying the morphological characteristics that distinguish plant varieties is an important issue for plant breeders and researchers. The objective of the present study was to create a partial least squares discrimination analysis (PLS-DA) model with morphological characteristics for species discrimination and to select the characteristics most important for species discrimination. Data for 27 vegetative characteristics were obtained from Salix caprea and Salix gracilistyla, and their interspecific hybrid (S. caprea × S. gracilistyla), and used for PLS-DA. According to this analysis, seven of the 27 characteristics were identified as those that most influenced species discrimination, and the PLS-DA model with these seven characteristics had a classification accuracy of 86% to 100%. The classification performance of this model was not significantly different from that of the model with all 27 characteristics (full model). Therefore, these results indicated that the three species can be relatively well distinguished by the seven characteristics extracted by PLS-DA. In addition, the selected characteristics can be used to select cross-breeding parents in subsequent breeding programs and to test the distinction, uniformity, and stability (DUS test) of the hybrid variety. From this perspective, PLS-DA is thought to be a useful methodology for classifying new plant varieties and providing information for breeding.

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