Biologia Plantarum (Jul 2023)
Genetic diversity and population structure of two threatened ginseng species in Vietnam
Abstract
Two ginseng species Panax vietnamensis and Panax stipuleanatus are precious medicinal plants restricted in several Vietnam provinces. They are very limited and endangered due to degraded habitats and over-harvesting. To preserve these two species, we used eight nuclear microsatellite markers to investigate genetic variability from the nine populations with 246 individuals for these two ginseng species. Our findings showed a moderate genetic heterozygosity in two species, P. vietnamensis (HE = 0.386) and P. stipuleanatus (HE = 0.342). Deficiency of heterozygosity was observed in all the studied populations of P. vietnamensis and three populations of P. stipuleanatus. Some populations had high allelic richness for both species. Private alleles were determined in all the studied populations of P. vietnamensis and two P. stipuleanatus populations. Genetic differentiation was low in two ginseng species. However, habitat loss, over-utilization and over-harvesting can be the main causes of reduced genetic heterozygosity. Neighbor-joining tree and discriminant analysis of principal components detected three major genetic groups. Finally, based on our findings, we propose in situ conservation of populations with high expected heterozygosity, allelic richness, and private alleles. Seed collection should be performed for ex-situ conservation as genetic pools in the future.
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