02494naa a2200241 a 450000100080000000500110000800800410001902400180006010000180007824502360009626000090033252016940034165300210203570000220205670000200207870000190209870000250211770000240214270000200216670000190218670000200220577300270222520422802017-04-13 2016 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d7 a:10.13712DOI1 aLOIOLA, C. M. aGenetic relationships among tall coconut palm (cocos nucifera l.) accessions of the international coconut genebank for latin america and the caribbean (ICG-LAC), evaluated using microsatellite markers (SSRs).h[electronic resource] c2016 aThe diversity and genetic relationships among two accessions of tall coconut palms col-lected in Brazil and seven accessions introduced from different geographic regions of the world were analyzed using 25 microsatellite primers, 19 of which were polymorphic and detected between 4 and 10 alleles per locus, with an average of 6.57. The observed and expected heterozygosity ranged from 0.25 and 0.40 in the Rennell Islands Tall (RIT) accession to 0.54 and 0.62 in the Polynesian Tall (PYT) accession. The analysis of genetic structure resulted in the formation of five distinct groups. The first group was formed by the accessions Brazilian Tall ? Praia do Forte (BRTPF), Brazilian Tall ? Merepe (BRTMe) and West African Tall (WAT); the second group consisted of Malaysian Tall (MLT); the third group of RIT; the fourth group of Vanuatu Tall (VTT); and the fifth group of Rotuman Tall (RTMT), Tonga Tall (TONT) and PYT. The dendrogram based on the nearest-neighbor method detected the formation of two main groups and five subgroups, indicating that the genetic relationships of the accessions are based on their geographic regions of origin. The analyses revealed genetic relationships between the accessions collected in Brazil and the accession from Africa, and among palms from South East Asia and the South Pacific, con firming the common origin of these accessions. The information obtained in this study can guide decisions on germplasm conservation activities and the efficient selection of geneti cally divergent parents for use in coconut breeding programs in Brazil, which are attempting to select for disease resistance, mainly to lethal yellowing, among other characteristics. aCocos nucifera L1 aAZEVEDO, A. O. N.1 aDINIZ, L. E. C.1 aARAGÃO, W. M.1 aAZEVEDO, C. D. de O.1 aSANTOS, P. H. A. D.1 aRAMOS, H. C. C.1 aPEREIRA, M. G.1 aRAMOS, S. R. R. tPLOS ONE, march, 2016.